Sally Magnusson's classy new novel <i>The Ninth Child </i>has snared me . . . <b>Suffice to say I'm hooked, and I'm only on page 50. It's wonderful and I daren't stop. One never messes with the faeries.</b>
Melanie Reid, THE TIMES
<b>An absolute triumph! </b>Such a clever interweaving of history and fairytale.<b> I loved the lively intelligent heroine and the brooding sense of menace throughout</b>. It had me gripped right to the end
Sarah Haywood, author of THE CACTUS
Not only did the book transport me while I read, but when I slept my dreams were extraordinarily vivid - I dreamt I was roaming in the highlands, smelling fresh air, feeling sunlight - far from my hospital bed. <b>Few books have this impact on me.</b>
Michelle Gallen, author of BIG GIRL SMALL TOWN
An <b>engaging </b>mix of folklore and Victorian history
Sunday Times
This <b>eerie </b>tale blends Scottish folklore with historical fiction
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<b>Pacy and accomplished, with a supernatural chill</b>
The Herald
<b>Enthralling</b>
Scots Magazine
Well-researched, fascinating . . . a strong sense of place . . . <b>an accomplished piece of writing, cementing Magnusson's place</b>, not just as one of Scotland's best-loved broadcasters, but <b>one of Scotland's leading writers of historical fiction</b>
Scotland on Sunday
<b>Entertaining, educational and thought-provoking, <i>The Ninth Child</i> is pacy and accomplished</b>, with particular skill in capturing the supernatural chill attached to some of Scotland's most picturesque sights
Press Assocation
<b>A compassionate story of the clashing cultures of science and superstition, of male and female, rich and poor</b>
Anne Goodwin Weekly
<b>A gripping plot, vivid period detail and a terrific touch of faery too</b>
Caroline Sanderson
A beguiling<b> weave of fine imaginative writing and deft research</b> into Celtic folklore and a triumph of Scottish engineering. <i>The Ninth Child</i> is <b>a dramatic and magical novel told with enormous zest and wit.</b> <b>I am looking forward to Sally Magnusson's next fine novel.</b>
Les Wilson Author of The Drowned and the Saved
A very impressive piece of work, drawing on<b> a strong sense of place and a rich seam of history and folklore </b>for its power.
Donald Murray, author of As the Women Lay Dreaming.
Sally Magnusson has written <b>a brilliant tour-de-force </b>that blends together unlikely ingredients such as engineering, the Celtic Otherworld and 19th century medicine into <b>a memorable, riveting, page-turning story. I savoured it!</b>
Alistair Moffat
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Broadcaster and journalist Sally Magnusson has written 10 books, most famously, her Sunday Times bestseller, Where Memories Go (2014) about her mother's dementia.
Half-Icelandic, half Scottish, Sally has inherited a rich storytelling tradition. Her debut novel, The Sealwoman's Gift, was a Radio 2 Book Club and Zoe Ball Book Club selection, and was shortlisted for several prizes, including the Authors' Club Best First Novel Award, the Saltire Fiction Book of the Year, the Paul Torday Memorial Prize, the McKitterick Prize, the Waverton Good Read Award and the HWA Debut Fiction Crown.
The Ninth Child, her second novel, publishes in spring 2020.