TALES FROM MOONSHINY HALL by Stuart Hill
Reviewed by Susan Price
'Tales From Moonshiny Hall' by Stuart Hill |
The title seems quite cosy: it conjures up an image of Dickensian characters sitting round a fire, telling stories.
And, indeed, this is the frame of the book, albeit in modern dress. A ‘businessman with an 'interest in the paranormal’ hires Moonshiny Hall for a dinner party on Hallowe’en, choosing the house because of its ‘unquiet’ reputation.
The host
asks each of his guests to tell a tale about their own paranormal
experiences, and even the group’s sceptic obliges, starting them off
with an affecting little story about a friend’s childhood. The
story-telling then goes around the table, to a young woman
social-worker, a shy young student, an ex-military policeman, the widow
of a Tory MP, and others.
The stories are much more varied than I expected, and a lot more disturbing.
The second,
for instance, is set at a Municipal Waste Recycling Unit: a more modern
and less cosy or spooky setting could hardly be imagined. Yet this
story rises to a pitch of horror that few ghost stories I’ve read can
equal (and I’ve read a lot, and am a great fan of M. R. James and Le
Fanu.)
As with the
best writers of ghost stories, Stuart Hill has a knack of evoking, in a
few words, the movements and sounds that make our flesh creep, whether
it’s the soft impact of a body against a door when we’re alone in a flat
at night, or something shadowy moving towards us with ‘the loathsome grace of a hunting spider’.
The voices
of the different story-tellers are beautifully done too, whether it’s
the crisp, controlled voice of the Tory wife, the bluff and humorous
Redcap, the waspish doubter, or the more tentative voices of the young social worker and student.
This book
is certainly for adults: it's far too disturbing for children. But any
adult who loves ghost stories, and that grue that only a well-told story
can give, will enjoy Tales From Moonshiny Hall.Tales From Moonshiny Hall can be instantly downloaded from Amazon here,
Susan Price also has e-books of ghost stories available from Amazon: Nightcomers and Hauntings
Susan Price also blogs at 'Do Authors Dream of Electric Books?' together with 28 other authors who independently publish e-books.
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