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Lie of the Land

Lie of the Land is a dark, domestic literary thriller set in the Black Country in the Midlands, UK. When Rory and Jemma meet, Rory already has a girlfriend, but that doesn't stop them getting together and, much sooner than Jemma would like, they're buying their first house together in the heart of the grimy Midlands. 'The Rocks' is a run-down, 'doer-upper' and right from the off, Jemma is reluctant and unhappy, far from ready for commitment. But there is something about the house that is both compelling and sinister, and the situation takes a darker turn when a terrible accident happens involving their new next door neighbours, forcing both Jemma and Rory to tackle their inner... alles anzeigen expand_more

Lie of the Land is a dark, domestic literary thriller set in the Black Country in the Midlands, UK. When Rory and Jemma meet, Rory already has a girlfriend, but that doesn't stop them getting together and, much sooner than Jemma would like, they're buying their first house together in the heart of the grimy Midlands.

'The Rocks' is a run-down, 'doer-upper' and right from the off, Jemma is reluctant and unhappy, far from ready for commitment. But there is something about the house that is both compelling and sinister, and the situation takes a darker turn when a terrible accident happens involving their new next door neighbours, forcing both Jemma and Rory to tackle their inner demons.

Themes of toxic relationships, secrets and deceit are intensified by a judgmental narrative voice which propels the plot to its even darker resolution.



No one else writes like Kerry Hadley-Pryce, with her unique and unsettling way of dragging you into her stories and making you complicit in their outcomes. Her latest novel, Lie of the Land, is a compulsive read that grips the reader and doesn't stop playing with you, twisting your perceptions, your sympathies and your judgements. Is it a haunted house story, a crime novel, a domestic noir? It's all of this and more: a modern gothic horror that I could not look away from, a page turner that left me with the uncanny feeling that something was haunting the book itself. If Shirley Jackson and Patricia Highsmith got together and made a creepy baby, Kerry Hadley-Pryce would be the result. She's a magician, and this book will drag you under her spell.





(on previous work) God's Country, by Kerry Hadley-Pryce, is a disturbingly atmospheric story set in The Black Country, a place without borders marked on maps, yet has shaped generations of people raised within its haunting environs. The narrator – a fabulously unsettling voice – is constructing a tale based on their own knowledge of the characters and place, and from what they have been told by the protagonist, Alison.



(on previous work) ★★★★★ God's Country is Kerry Hadley Pryce's most densely written novel yet. The key occurrences of the novel are told to Alison by her partner Guy, whose involvement in them has left him deeply disturbed. So: can Alison trust Guy? Can the narrator trust Alison? Can we trust the narrator? In each case, not necessarily. I've not come across a narrative so keen to draw attention to its own unreliability since The Name of the Rose. And I've not come across so distinct a use of tense since Emma Tennant's Wild Nights.



(on previous work) Landscape is a cauldron for Kerry Hadley-Pryce's intensely creepy and evocative writing.



(on previous work) The Black Country is a macabre triumph, whether you read it as a horror fable about love or a meditation on the controlling character of the artist. Either way, this ambitious and memorable first novel loiters like a rotting fish left behind the fridge.



(on previous work) Kerry Hadley-Pryce creates the stifling atmosphere of a contemporary England.



(on previous work) Hadley-Pryce has a unique and impressive way of not only getting into the minds of the characters but also the readers.



This decidedly bleak 4th novel by a British writer occupies the liminal space between the currently fashionable domestic thriller genre and a sharp sense of gothic horror at times reminiscent of Shirley Jackson … Intense, carried by an oblique and literary narrative voice, this is the stuff of nightmares and a striking portrait of a couple whose sins just won't let go of them, unable to detach themselves from a living nightmare with inexorable consequences. Oppressive, at times awkward to follow but nonetheless compelling, this is a hybrid thriller cum ghost story that packs a dark punch and will divide readers while deserving attention for its ambition and powerful voice.



Lie of the Land is a dark and unsettling account of how a young woman loses the sense she has of herself after becoming involved with a man. It is mostly written in what I believe is present perfect tense, a choice that somehow adds a sense of foreboding. It is clear from the start that bad things have happened but what and to whom constitutes the story.



This book had me on edge from start to finish. The writing is raw, gripping, and layered with complexity. It's not just about the thrill of the plot but the emotions it evokes the unease, the tension, and the chilling sense of inevitability. If you love stories that blur the line between psychological drama and literary fiction, this one is a must-read.



Hauntingly beautiful, mesmerizing, harrowing and poetic. This is undoubtedly one of my favorite reads this year!



The Black Country. Dark, foreboding gloom-ridden. Lie of the Land is exactly the same: dark, foreboding with an aura of gloom and added tension as our main protagonist, Jemma, is faced with ever-increasing anxiety as she makes major life changes that have unforeseen consequences for herself and those around her. She had what seemed the perfect life but after what she thought would be a one night stand she is sucked into a relationship which has tragic consequences and tilts her balanced lifestyle.



I have been blogging here for more than ten years, and reviewing books online for longer than that, and in all that time I have, but very rarely, perhaps five or six times, come across a book so stunning, so good, that it's actually hard to know what to say about it (beyond "read this"). Lie of the Land is such a book. weniger anzeigen expand_less
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  • SW9781784633325110164

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  • Artikelnummer SW9781784633325110164
  • Autor find_in_page Kerry Hadley-Pryce
  • Autoreninformationen Kerry Hadley-Pryce lives and writes in the Black Country, UK. She… open_in_new Mehr erfahren
  • Wasserzeichen ja
  • Verlag find_in_page Salt
  • Seitenzahl 176
  • Barrierefreiheit
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  • ISBN 9781784633325

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