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The Glass Demon

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What you can’t see could kill you.

When Cecily arrives at her new home with her fiancé, Raf, she’s looking forward to a happy life with all her fears behind her. No longer a put-upon drudge, she is loved and free, ready to explore their new world.

After a summer spent battling the forces of darkness, Raf’s happy to get back to the garden of his chaotic ancestral home. There are flowers to tend and vegetables to harvest and he’s determined to create a perfect sanctuary for Cecily to call her own.

But when a demon made of glass escapes from an ancient church window, the peace of their idyllic village is shattered. Neighbour turns against neighbour, crops turn bad in the soil and flies blacken the air. As a child lingers between life and death, bewitched by the glass demon’s bite, Raf and Cecily must remind the villagers of what really matters and unite the community in a battle to send their infernal tormentor back to hell.

245 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 29, 2021

8 people want to read

About the author

Catherine Curzon

57 books190 followers
Catherine Curzon writes books about old Hollywood and even older royals. She writes WW2 sagas for Orion as Ellie Curzon.

Catherine’s work has been featured on the official website of BBC History Magazine, and in publications such as The Daily Telegraph, All About History, Who Do You Think You Are?, and Jane Austen’s Regency World. Further afield, she has appeared in the pages of publications including The Washington Post, Town & Country, Elle Australia, Der Bund, La Vanguardia and Metrópole.

She has spoken at venues including Kenwood House, Wellington College, the Royal Pavilion, the National Maritime Museum and Dr Johnson’s House. Her first play, Being Mr Wickham, premiered to sell-out audiences in 2019. It was streamed worldwide in 2021, followed by a nationwide tour of the UK.

Catherine holds a Master’s degree in Film and when not dodging the furies of the guillotine, can be found by following the distant sound of Dino. She lives in Yorkshire atop a ludicrously steep hill with a rakish gent, a relaxed cat, and an excitable dog.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Frankie.
1,035 reviews75 followers
June 10, 2021
It’s here…the second in this enthralling The de Chastelaine Trilogy has landed!! ~ I feel like an over-excited child on Christmas morning…Am I excited about his book or what?

I honestly don’t have adequate words for just how much love I have for this book, it’s amazing!

It seems like a lifetime when I first ‘met’ Raf and Cecily in The Ghost Garden, I can’t believe that it has been near enough two years since we first walked into this glorious series. To say I have missed these characters is an understatement – it sounds a little odd I know to miss fictional characters, but I have. Raf and Cecily melted themselves onto my heart so much so there have been times over the last nearly two years when I needed the soothing Raphael de Chastelaine in all his tattooed, bare feet, chocolate-eating glory so I have read The Ghost Garden a few times, and it still astounds me just as it did the first time. I have been waiting ever so impatiently for the next book (this book) in the; The de Chastelaine Trilogy, but it was well and truly worth the long, arduous wait!!

The Glass Demon is the second book in the hugely loved (especially by me) The De Chastelaine Trilogy, even though this does continue from where The Ghost Garden finished, I would say you could very easily read them both as stand-alone as each book does focus on an individual case. But, I would recommend that you read The Ghost Garden first as that covers how Raf and Cecily met and what happened to have them make the trip from Devon to Yorkshire – plus lots more shirt-less Raf scenes to make you swoon, what more could you want 😉

The story open’s with Raf and Cecily arriving at Raf’s ancestral home to Acaster Garrow, a teeny-weeny little fishing village – our boy has come back home to Yorkshire 🙂 they are hoping to settle into their newly found happiness after the drama of what happened (in the previous book). But, if they think they can walk through the (winking) front door and settle into pre-marital bliss they are very wrong as Raf’s brother Michael wants his brother to look into something going on in the village church. It is here where things start getting very creepy, the new window is harbouring something sinister, something which once escaped starts wreaking havoc. Our Raf and Cecily are up against the unknown once again, they must face down a demon that can hide practically in plain sight and one which brings so much anger and hatred (and flies….shivers!!) to their quiet village. If Raf and Cecily can’t figure out what this demon is and how to destroy it, not just their village but the world isn’t safe from the hatred, rotting food, flies, and toxicity it brings whenever near.

I got a little bit of a Harry potter feel whenever the Demon was being talked about, as no can say it’s name without fear which made me think of ‘He who must not be named’ I really enjoyed that, it’s a tiny detail but I liked it. I’m easily amused!

Once again the story is told through the eyes of Cecily, something which I wholeheartedly love and approve of especially as watching the world go by through her eyes we see a lot of Raf, who really is allergic to wearing clothes he is unashamedly open in his love of nakedness. Not that I am complaining, I do have a real love of this gorgeously rugged, ruffled, joyful, charming, twinkly-eyed, sexy tattooed man with that blacker than black hair and those bluest of blue eyes and his very unique gift.

Oh, my goodness how much do I love this guy?


Cecily has come out of her shell from when we first met her, now she has found her freedom from her old life and found the love of her life in the form of a shoeless, shirtless heart-throb who shows her just how much she is wanted, how much she is loved and cared for, our controlled, scared and mouse-like Cecily has turned into a strong, happy, resilient, determined, protective, loyal and unwavering woman. There is still an essence of her previous life that resurface in moments when she is feeling shy or uncertain, but with gentlemanly Raf by her side giving her all the confidence and reassurance she needs she has come into her own. Cecily certainly proves what a determined and strong woman she is, she goes through quite an ordeal and she faces down demons for her man. But then where our Rafael de Chastelaine is concerned, what red-blooded woman wouldn’t risk life and limb for him?

I love that as with the first book; The Ghost Garden, Cecily and Raf are so in sync with each other, they are genuine friends as well as lovers, they understand each other as no other do and I like that. Raf shows just how wonderful a character he is, he is super supportive and caring, I liked how encouraging he is of Cecily which gives her the confidence boost she has lacked. I also love how fun he is with the children of the village, which makes me hope we will have a story somewhere down the line with mini Raf’s and Cecily’s running around.

I love that in this one we get to meet more of the de Chastelaine’s, I especially love Raf’s brother Mike what a dark horse he is. A priest sneaks into the local witch’s bedroom under the cover of midnight aided by his own unique gift which he shares with Raf. Mike is so much like Raf and yet so far removed from him you wouldn’t believe they were related, but he has that charismatic de Chastelaine personality which we all adore about Raf. I am hoping we get to see more of Mike and Mimi, they are a fun and cute couple and I’d love to see more of them.

The ending…oh, my, what a beautiful, emotional and perfect ending to this particular story. I am probably completely wrong but from the last few pages, I saw another adventure awaiting our intrepid couple, an adventure in Egypt, perhaps? Unless, I am adding two and two together and coming up with ten while seeing plots that aren’t there, hmmm…most likely! Anyhow, where ever we go for our next outing I cannot wait, I adore this series!!

The Glass Demon is a marvellously intriguing, delightfully romantic, unexpectedly twisty and exciting book. It’s incredibly fast-paced, I read this throughout a couple of days – but if I had the chance to just sit and read without any interruptions then I would have easily devoured this in one sitting. It’s not just a stonking great and original story, but it’s addictive. I was obsessed with what was going to happen, would Raf and Cecily save the village or would their village be permanently angry and covered in flies? I needed to know! When I wasn’t reading it, I was thinking of it – especially of Raf, I’m sure I have mentioned how much I love him.

Curzon and Harkstead have as ever stolen my heart with their exceptional and flawless writing, I adore this duo they are an incredible writing partnership who always deliver a beautiful and unique story that is always full of love.
Profile Image for Judy & Marianne from Long and Short Reviews.
5,476 reviews177 followers
June 28, 2021
Raf and Sissy are making their way to their home up in Yorkshire. Both are looking for some quiet time. Will they get it, or will they get more than they bargained for?

This is the second book in the de Chastelaine series, and I definitely recommend you read book one as it will help you understand both the characters and the situation they are currently in.

The village in Yorkshire is very different from a boarding school in Devon, but still you are delighted with the descriptions of both characters and landscape/buildings, etc. With a glass demon on the loose that feeds off hate and fear, it is up to Sissy and Raf, plus the children of the village, to sort things out.

This is a fast-paced, intriguing, sweet story that gives me a nostalgic feeling. I adore the genteel romance between Raf and Sissy, plus the addition of new characters, like Mike and Mim (and I’m sorry, but I couldn’t help but think of the magnificent, marvelous, mad Madam Mim!)

A fantastic addition to the series and I can’t wait for the next. Absolutely recommended by me.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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