A stage magician and a caged goddess
𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘉𝘭𝘶𝘳𝘳𝘦𝘥 𝘓𝘢𝘯𝘥𝘴 are a place where worlds overlap, and where wielders of magic can pass from on realm to another. Our modern world is just one of seven.
John Aviemore, Ian Sainsbury’s protagonist, is a professional magician, a man who specializes in close up magic, and contracted to work at a top London hotel.
He is also a man in grief. His beloved wife Sarah was taken by cancer three years earlier, and his unresolved complex grief has removed all joy from his life. He continues working for the minor distraction that it offers.
He has a dark period in his past, too. Some thirty years ago, as a young university (and virginal) student, he was seduced by a woman he met at a party— a woman who fit his ideal, he thought. She took him back to her cottage near Bristol and introduced him to erotic delights he hadn’t imagined. Over a period of weeks, they met at the cottage half a dozen more times, and it was only with the help of friends that he realized that there was nothing to their relationship but sex— no real affection, no intellectual sharing. So he broke it off, running from the cottage and falling into a psychotic break.
Now, thirty years later, he learns that he has inherited the cottage. When he goes to visit it, he finds himself trapped there, as though Bristol and the modern world no longer existed. He will have, somehow, to free himself, to use the real magic that can only be touched by women, and which he doesn’t believe exists.
Recommended.