Reviewed by: Keith Nixon
Genre: Psychological thriller
Approximate word count: 35-40,000 words
Availability
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Author:
Richard
Godwin is a widely published author, with a focus on horror and crime, and a playwright.
He has written two full length novels – Apostle
Rising and Mr Glamour and has
contributed multiple short stories to anthologies.
You can
learn more about the author on his website.
Description:
It is high
summer and Rex Allen moves into his new house, The Telescope. Barely has he
begun to unpack when his attractive neighbor, Evangeline Glass, invites him to
one of her regular parties.
Rex finds
himself obsessing on Evangeline. He begins to immerse himself in her life,
filming her at first, then following her movements, convinced there’s more to
her than meets the eye. When Rex discovers Evangeline’s secret he persuades her
to visit him for a two hour period each week and to become another person –
Coral.
But why?
Appraisal:
Mr Godwin
reveals the plot underlying One Lost
Summer like a card sharp. He steadily doles out the pack one by one, hiding
the trumps with clever sleight of hand, only revealing the complete set right
at the conclusion. This is a clever, intelligent psychological thriller.
The
characters are all very strong, every one is an enigma; no one is quite what
they seem. Even when the reader thinks they have the person figured out the
author flips their behavior again, shows a little more of their personality and
position.
First and
foremost is Rex who doesn’t really know himself. He’s clearly wealthy, but
there’s no clue how he’s made his money. He drinks a lot of the best wine and
whisky. His behavior is abnormal - recording Evangeline on film, often not washing,
hearing things in the house – he’s edgy for some buried reason. And as the tale
is told in the first person through Rex the reader is as puzzled as the protagonist.
Then
there’s enigmatic Evangeline, who tries to control everyone and everything
around her, but actually is the one being contained. She has plenty of secrets
herself. And her husband Harry – possessive of his wife and possessing a
dubious background. Finally the lesser characters - the hangers-on and party goers such
as weak willed Brenda and her husband.
After an
initial chapter setting the scene, where Rex moves into his new house (called
The Telescope because the previous owner had the instruments all over the house
– perhaps to watch Evangeline too?) and meets her, the tension and mystery
quickly build. There are plenty of puzzles (and blind alleys) laid out for the
reader.
The layout
and style of One Lost Summer is
interesting. The chapters are short, and the book is broken into sections, each
titled to reveal in themselves a little more of the plot. The writing is
economical and tightly focused. The attributes of each character are usually
strikingly described – such as the clothes they wear, the patterns, the brands
(Chanel, Montrachet wine). It all subtly adds to the ambience without being
distracting and is key in the psychological process of Rex working on
Evangeline.
Overall I
thoroughly enjoyed this work. With summer apparently approaching this would
make an excellent holiday read.
FYI:
Nothing of
note.
Format/Typo Issues:
None.
Rating: ***** Five Stars
5 comments:
This is one of the best reviews I've seen of this book. Captures the unique mood and pace without giving away the plot's immersive turns and twists. One of my favorite novels this year --or any other for that matter. Thanks Big Al.
Thanks, AJ. I should point out that Keith Nixon wrote the review, but I'm happy to share a tiny bit of the credit. :)
I add my thanks too AJ very nice of you to say so...
Keith
Thanks to Keith for a perceptive professional review and to BooksAndPals. And last but by no means least thank you AJ.
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