Friday, 6 November 2020

The Haunted Shore by Neil Spring - Book Review

 


'A CHILLING GHOST STORY SET IN THE HAUNTING WILDERNESS OF SUFFOLK

'When Lizzy moves to a desolate shore to escape her past, she hopes to find sanctuary. But a mysterious stranger is waiting for her, her father's carer, and when darkness falls, something roams this wild stretch of beach, urging Lizzy to investigate its past. The longer she stays, the more the shore's secrets begin to stir. Secrets of a sea that burned, of bodies washed ashore -- and a family's buried past reaching into the present.

'And when Lizzy begins to suspect that her father's carer is a dangerous imposter with sinister motives, a new darkness rises. What happens next is everyone's living nightmare . . .'

The Haunted Shore follows Elizabeth Valentine, Lizzy, a successful woman in her mid thirties with a partner that loves her and a high paid PR job in London. She loves her life, and is ready to settle down into married life with her partner and have some kids. Unfortunately for her, her life is about to spiral out of control. Lizzy's partner is also her boss, and when he removes her from an important project she turns to the one place shes always found comfort, online gambling.

Without realising what she's doing Lizzy drains her bank accounts in a spree of online Blackjack. Panicked and desperate she uses her corporate credit card to try and win her money back; but alas, her addiction prevents her from stopping before it all goes wrong. With £80,000 stolen from her work and gone to the wind, Lizzy is fired from her job, loses her partner, and is being hounded by shady characters who all want their money back.

Unable to see what she can do to get herself out of this hole her addiction has dug her she climbs onto the edge of a bridge and is about to end her life when she gets a phone call from her brother. It turns out her father is getting sicker, that he's struggling to get by, and her brother needs her to help. Grabbing hold of this sudden lifeline with both hands Lizzy travels back to her childhood home to help her father.

A former architect, her father is hiding away from the world in his converted Martello tower on a stretch of the near deserted Shingle Street, a small patch of coast in Suffolk. Lizzy arrives at this remote home to find her father in worse condition than she though, her brother moved away to live with a younger woman, and a strange carer, Hazel, staying in the tower. Back in her fathers life and determined to help him, Lizzy not only has to worry about the debt collectors on her trail, and continually locking horns with Hazel, but there's also mysterious figures on the beach at night, and strange noises that she can't explain haunting her too.

The Haunted Shore is a book that's full of atmosphere, one where you feel the location seeping off the page into you as you read it. The remote and dreary shore of Lizzy's childhood home is dark, creepy, and full of atmosphere, and it never once lets up. The oppressive nature of the winter weather, as well as the cold and isolated feel of the tower means that this is a place where Lizzy can never find rest, where she never feels relaxed or fully safe. The result of this is a woman who is barely keeping a hold of herself throughout most of the book.

Lizzy is a character that feels very real in a lot of ways, for starters she's incredibly flawed, and makes so pretty awful mistake like anyone would. But the thing I like about her most, that I really appreciate from Neil Spring, is that her gambling addiction isn't treated as a failing on her part. Sure, there's a time at the start of the book where she's blaming herself for doing it, but she soon starts to address it like any kind of addiction, something that is a part of her, something that she has to fight against because it's not just someone making the conscious choice to go and gamble, but an insidiousness inside her that keeps trying to push her towards it. Society seems to understand that addiction is often something that someone can't help, when it comes to things like alcohol or smoking, but other addictions are treated as some kind of moral failing or weakness on the part of those who fall victim to it, and gambling is one of these. To see it treated with the respect and sympathy it deserves is wonderful, and helps to normalise the idea that it's a sickness, not an active decision for gambling addicts.

Whilst battling with this illness, Lizzy is subject to further mental strain in the form of Hazel, a woman who you just can't help but hate. There are times where she feels completely genuine, where you believe that she's a kind woman, there to do what she can to help a vulnerable older man. You come to believe that perhaps Lizzy is just overreacting, and her feelings of suspicion and hate have no grounding in reality. Other times you completely agree with Lizzy, you believe completely that Hazel is a nasty, awful person, one who's there to cause harm. The back and forth on the view of this character, on the way both the reader and Lizzy feel about her is great, and really speaks to how well written the book is. I won't say which of these is right, whether Hazel is good or bad, because finding that out yourself is half the fun.

Neil Spring also manages to weave the ghostly parts of the story into the narrative in great ways, and whilst you never feel that this supernatural element is completely gone thanks to the atmosphere, there are large sections of the book where it takes a back seat to the human drama going on. The two stories intertwine together very well, and both lead to some shocking revelations and surprise conclusions.

Overall I really enjoyed The Haunted Shore, it had a compelling narrative with some great twists and turns, and some really creepy, spooky moments in their too. 


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