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A Child from the Wishing Well
By: Raymond NickfordImprint: Smashwords
Format: ePub Un-encrypted (DRM free)
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Reader Review: The literary thriller isn't usually my cup of tea but I was surprised by A Child from the Wishing Well. Nickford obviously revels in the subtleties of the English language and from the start I feared this might distract me but the characters are so meticulously observed that you really feel you're living alongside them. When this means being thrust into the shiveringly eerie presence of the eccentric old music tutor, Ruth Stein, and her endearing pupil, Rosie, it's hard not to be drawn in so far that you forget, like me, that your coffee has gone stone cold while you're reading. I sometimes thought the storyline was complex but the detail and locations in German occupied Prague and the Malvern Hills were so well researched they sounded first hand and, again, I felt I was there, alongside the poor Jewish music student who had to struggle to stay alive and who then found anonymity in England where, childless in old age, her craving to have a child of her own led her to hypnotise her pupils - even though she loved them all. An original book, challenging, but a quality read.
Ashamed he cannot relate to his daughter, Rosie, Gerard accompanies and stays with her for violin lessons at the home of tutor, Ruth Stein. Ruth, fascinating him for her musical sensitivity, becomes a confidante. Against his better judgement and his wife's reservations - the paranoid, Gerard, can only cling to believing the tutor can bring him closer to Rosie. Soon, he must wrestle with his suspicions again, for Ruth mothers Rosie, almost smothers... Reaching out to a broken doll, propped in the darkness at the bottom of Ruth's garden well, Gerard wants to believe what he touches and smells is just the decay of sacks enfolding a doll; the closest to a child that the lonely old spinster could cling. Investigating, Gerard's fears for Rosieâs safety begin to mount. Rosie draws closer to her father, notices his new concern but, if she is in real danger, can he save her? If he needs to save her, can Gerard triumph over the emotional void of paranoia; feel, accept, he and Rosie could share the love of which others speak? ( Set in the Malvern hills and German occupied Prague.) Reviews Candace Bowen Early - author of A Knight of Silence Growing up in a suburb of Chicago, the first scary movie I remember seeing was the 1965 Bette Davis movie, The Nanny. To this day, that movie has always stuck with me as one of the great psychological thrillers of all time. For me, A Child from the Wishing Well, is reminiscent of that movie. Ruth and Gerard strap you in, and take you on a psychological thrill-ride to the very end. Raven Clark - author of The Shadowsword Saga Raymond Nickford has a writing voice that has to be one of the most unique and intriguing I have come across. The story is both enjoyable and oddly chilling, all the more so for its apparent warmth. The pleasantness of Ruth and her liveliness should seem gentle, grandmotherly and appealing, a sweet old lady one could adore, but reading the pitch, what seems kindly suddenly turns sinister, her upbeat excitability oddly macabre. Each time she says lines like "Our Rosie," and speaks so excitedly, rather than hearing a pleasant old lady, I think of a bird screeching. Fingers down a blackboard. Will Gerard realize what he feels is not a symptom of his disease? And if not, will Heather uncover the truth and save Rosie before the hurricane that is Ruth sweeps her into oblivion? Stephen Valentine - author of Nobody Rides for Free The author gives great voice to his characters, describing well their idiosyncrasies. A good story must either go deep or wide, and with Nickford's background in psychology he goes deep within the human condition. For some adults, the ability to relate to a child does not come naturally, and requires enormous if not awkward effort. This is an often overlooked subject worth exploring. Tony Brady - author of Scenes from an Examined Life A beautifully constructed scenario emerged. The attic scene vividly describes the significance of the doll in the depth of the well. All the mystery and menace of the story coalesces here. I was taken back years to the 1960s when I read a story by Saki entitled The Lumber Room. Mystery and menace are purely distilled in a distinctive writing style and I was thrilled that that there was still another 10 Chapters in a book that engrosses the reader from the opening passage. Burgio - author of A Grain of Salt This is an intriguing story: is Gerald being overly possessive toward his daughter or is Miss Stein really a threat? Every parent is aware today that he or she needs to supervise their child's friends. But a violin teacher? I liked Gerald because of his predicament. This should have a wide appeal because it touches parents so personally. Good read. A. R. Taylor - author of Sex, Rain, and Cold Fusion Full of dark shadings and menace. I like the tenderness of the father's feelings.
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| Title of eBook: A Child from the Wishing Well | |
| Release Date: 08-04-2011 | |
| Publisher: Smashwords |
This eBook download is available in the following formats:
| Parent title | A Child from the... |
|---|---|
| Encrypted (DRM) | No |
| SKU | SW00000078893 |
| File size | 688302 |
| Internet Security | n/a |
| Printing | Not allowed |
| Copying | Not allowed |
| Read aloud | No Sys requirements Download reader |
| Devices | Samsung Tablet, Apple Ipad & Iphone, Barnes & Noble Nook, Kobo eReader, Aluratek Libre, Iliad, Nokia, Blackberry, Hanlin |
| Note | ePub, short for electronic publication is one of our favorites and should be yours for a couple of reasons. ePub offers reflowable text giving you flexibility to manipulate how the content is presented. Moreover, lots of cool features are now being developed for the reader like advanced video and audio. ePub is now an industry standard, so all of the "non-propreitary" hardware manufacturers are now supporting it. |
Title: A Child from the Wishing Well
Average Customer Review:
Number of Comments: 7 Rating(s) 2 Review(s)
3 of 3 people found the following eBook Review Helpful
Love born out of an eccentric music tutor, paranoid father and lonely child
January 6, 2012
Reviewer:
This book haunts...an uneasy feeling, like someone's watching someone being watched.
I enjoyed reading something different which has such detailed descriptions of character and scene that give it the feel of a film or film script. It's easy to picture one of the great old dames of film relishing the acting part of the flesh-quiveringly eerie music tutor,Ruth.
Gerard is a meticulous study of paranoia, his seven year old Rosie, a precocious but lonely daughter, confused by her father's apparent remoteness from her and his awkward attempts to be 'more normal', and closer to her.
But the character you can't get out of your hair is Ruth Stein, the musically brilliant and zany music tutor to Gerard's little girl, who "mothers... almost smothers" the girl - as perhaps she's done with many another little pupil. Is her garden wishing well really the innocent dream of a childless old spinster or is it something of which Gerard's growing fears about his daughter could be tragically justified?
I thought Ruth that, at times, Ruth did seem a bit over the top, even loopy, but there's no doubting the overall picture of her grows more convincing page by page and this novel is definitely so well written I felt I had to move from the sample to buying the book and am glad I did.
An original book, challenging, but a quality read.
January 23, 2012
Reviewer: A reader from US
The literary thriller isn't usually my cup of tea but I was surprised by A Child from the Wishing Well.
Nickford obviously revels in the subtleties of the English language and from the start I feared this might distract me but the characters are so meticulously observed that you really feel you're living alongside them.
When this means being thrust into the shiveringly eerie presence of the eccentric old music tutor, Ruth Stein, and her endearing pupil, Rosie, it's hard not to be drawn in so far that you forget, like me, that your coffee has gone stone cold while you're reading.
I sometimes thought the storyline was complex but the detail and locations in German occupied Prague and the Malvern Hills were so well researched they sounded first hand and, again, I felt I was there, alongside the poor Jewish music student who had to struggle to stay alive and who then found anonymity in England where, childless in old age, her craving to have a child of her own led her to hypnotise her pupils - even though she loved them all.
An original book, challenging, but a quality read.
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