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L R Fredericks
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Book
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Publisher | John Murray | ||
ISBN | 978-184854328 | ||
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Reviewer
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Ann
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FARUNDELL is a story of magical awakening as a young man searches for meaning in the aftermath of the First World War, a young girl comes of age and an old man journeys through memory to death. There's an enigmatic book, an erotic obsession, magic both black and white, a ghost who's not a ghost, a murder that's not a murder, a treasure that's not a treasure. It's about love, loss and longing; language, imagination and the nature of reality.
In the golden summer of 1924 Paul Asher, still shattered by the trauma of the Western Front, comes to Farundell, an idyllic country house set deep in the Oxfordshire countryside. There, he falls under the spell of the rich and eccentric Damory family: the celebrated Amazon explorer Perceval, Lord Damory, now blind and dying, whose story echoes Paul's own strange dreams, brilliant thirteen-year-old Alice, on the cusp of adulthood and, like Paul, a seeker of knowledge and, most fatefully, the wild and beautiful Sylvie, with whom he falls passionately in love. Before summer's end, there will be tragedy, comedy, resolution and, for Paul, a revelation that will change his life forever.
Review
An enchanting book. Take an idyllic English country house estate, with gardens, meadows, woods, a river, an island complete with folly and set it in a racy 1920s golden summer. People it with eccentrics, war heroes and survivors, slim young things and a pre-pubescent wunderkind and stir with Roman and Egyptian mythology, voodoo and lost tribe shamanism. Then sprinkle with ghosts and memories, death and sex.
The result is an intertwining of individual stories, each coming to terms and dealing with its own particular crisis. Well written, thought provoking and surprisingly believable.

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