Wraxford Hall, a decaying mansion in the English countryside, has a sinister reputation. Once, a family disappeared there. And now Constance Langton has inherited this dark place as well as the mysteries surrounding it. Having grown up in a house marked by the death of her sister, Constance is no stranger to mystery, secrets, and the dark magic around us. Her father was distant. Her mother was in perpetual mourning for her lost child. In a desperate attempt to coax her mother back to health, Constance took her to a seance hoping she would find supernatural comfort. But tragic consequences followed, leaving her alone in the world-- alone with Wraxford Hall. Saddled with this questionable bequest, she must find the truth at the heart of all these disappearances, apparitions, betrayal, blackmail, and villainy, even if it costs her life. John Harwood's second novel delivers on the great promise proven by his first with this gripping mystery set in the heart of Victorian England.
John Harwood is the author of two previous novels of Victorian Gothic suspense. Aside from fiction, his published work includes biography, poetry, political journalism and literary history. His acclaimed first novel, The Ghost Writer, won the International Horror Guild's First Novel Award. He lives in Hobart, Australia.
4.5 "insightful, melancholic and atmospheric" stars !!!
2015 Honorable Mention Read
Mr. Harwood has written a very, very fine book here.
This book will appeal to those readers that love a Victorian Gothic that has elements of mystery, the supernatural, romantic and familial love and deeply etched characters that think thoroughly, feel deeply and reflect on their own and others actions.
At first I thought this book was a series of interconnected novellas and then they merge into a story that is dark, sad and full of an atmosphere of deep fog and chills both in the physical and psychological senses. Despite this characters are drawn to each other with a deep hunger for connection despite many losses, prolonged grieving and feelings of inferiority for some and malignant superiority in others.
I read this on a beach at 90 degrees Fahrenheit and yet I could honestly say I would shiver when reading this. The writing was that authentic.
I feel that the author truly understood the motivations of all his characters and despite their deep flaws could have them all come together to create a story so multilayered, complexly interesting and full of suspense and interesting parallels.
This book was only a few inches short of perfect. I won't state the slight flaw in it as I don't want to detract to how excellent I found this.
Mr. Harwood you have found yourself a new fan. I look forward to adding another one of your novels to my to be read list.
okay it is high time i remove myself from the victorian gothic for a little while - everything is blurring together... this one was fine, not great. there was just something a little cartoony about it - big house, hidden passages, suits of armor, harnessing lightning, mesmerism... the usual. good rainy day book though.
THE SEANCE, by John Harwood is a gothic, Victorian-style mystery. I have to say that I really enjoyed the author's writing style, and will be searching out other books by him in the near future. Using the technique of telling the tale with a series of narratives written by various people, we are taken further back in time to the legends and stigma surrounding Wraxford Hall. This decaying manor is somehow traced back through the lineage and left to a young woman, Constance Langton--recently orphaned by parents that she never really felt "bonded" to.
Through the various diaries and narratives, we are given pieces of a puzzle going back decades, entwining many lives through its mysterious pages.
The menacing air hits immediately, and we are mere witnesses as Constance delves in deeper, determined to get at the root of what happened in that manor to make its reputation so bleak.
A great, slow-burning story for those who like to build upon the atmosphere and characters while leading to the ultimate conclusion of a tale that has never been known before.
The Seance By John Harwood This is a Victorian era mystery with hints of supernatural. People either love or despise the spiritualist movement. Due to the death of the main character's younger sister, she convinces her mom to go to the spiritualist to get relief. From there, things really go sideways for our gal. It's an entertaining read with characters that were believable, but the plot was a bit shaky. I will probably read another book by this author.
I just finished this as part of a book group read and is not my usual type of read. As a fact, it’s my first “ghost� story I read�.besides kids spooky Halloween comics.
Set in the later eighteen hundreds, Constance lost her sister and her grieving mother. At first it was my impression, that “The Séance� would take off as Constance takes her mother to see one, to make her feel better about her lost daughter. But that wasn’t so. The book is divided into many parts, timelines, and person’s views. It really gets confusing.
So according to the jacket of the book it reads: “…a gripping gothic thriller set in late Victorian England. It is a world of apparitions, of disappearances and unnatural phenomena, of betrayal and blackmail and black-hearted villains � murder.�
I can attest to the gloomy atmosphere, with fog, candlelight, dusty libraries, dark cellars, creaking floorboards, tombs and creepy churchyards. That all came well across by way of Harwood’s writing style.
“We think of the mind as enclosed within the narrow compass of the skull, but we could equally imagine a cavern filled with dark water and connected by some subterranean passage, to the limitless depths of the ocean, and think of each individual mind as a droplet of one great oceanic Mind which contains everything: all the gods and demons, the paradises and underworlds of every religion on earth, all history, all knowledge, everything that has ever happened. A mind upon which it could truly be said that nothing is lost, not so much as the fall of a sparrow...� � John Harwood, The Seance
It was so confusing. I had a hard time reading it. But I finished it. Maybe someone else enjoys this kind of writing or I really just did not get it. I found the story to be not "gripping" me, and somehow I must have missed the climax�.cause for me there was none!
This book was a strange one. I went into this with low expectations, as I'd seen a review prior to picking this up which emphasised how little of the supernatural was present in the storyline. I honestly think The Séance as a title is incredibly misleading, implying ghosts and visions. This book is not that. It is a story set during the Victorian period, and is more of a mystery than anything else. The tagline is a more apt title.
It took me a while to read this, and it took a long time to get into it. I found with each part my interest intensifying, but it never got to that point where I couldn't put the book down. In fact, every time I did put it down, it made it a lot harder to pick back up. The story was interesting, but I never felt drawn to the characters, and although I was interested to see what twists and turns were ahead, I put it down with a sense of 'meh'. It was good but nothing special.
There is a good story here but it is buried beneath the tedium of excessive Victorian pleasantries and feints too clever for their own good. The late Nineteenth Century setting is perfect for this sort of story as superstition and mystery are still commonplace although being gradually worn away by the advance of science and technology. The characters attempt to provide rational and scientific explanations for phenomena but retain the hopes or beliefs that something supernatural may account for the goings-on, providing a fertile ground for charlatans and showmen to prey upon their imaginations. Things we take for granted today--and even those we don't yet understand--were easy pickings as avenues for knowledgeable people to control those with less inquisitive minds.
The story is told from the eyes of three different speakers, each one more depressing than the last. They are layered like an onion (abcba) in such a way that by the time the reader returns to Constance's time (a in the onion), it is very easy to forget who she was! The sheer number of meaningless characters introduced in each section makes following who did what a chore. This can be desired in a more mundane whodunit, but the promise of something fantastical renders them annoyances. Couple this with a thoroughly unsatisfying ending and I'm afraid I cannot recommend or appreciate this work in its current form.
This is an enticing early draft of what could have been a solid homage to Doyle's Holmes. Another pass or two, including a weaving of the narratives rather than the current bookending of Constance's current timeline, would have created a much more immersive and enjoyable read.
Review from The Seance by John Harwood is set in the 1880s and is the story of Constance Langton. She becomes involved in spiritualism in an effort to lift her mother from the crippling grief of losing a child. Constance, due to the lack of regard and love from her parents has always had the nagging feeling that there is some mystery about her heritage, believing herself to be a foundling. Through diaries and journals and the aid of a world weary solicitor called Mr Montague she discovers a frightening legacy linking her to a crumbling deserted manor, Wraxford Hall, with a dark and murderous history. It's a brilliantly written homage to the Victorian mysteries and ghost stories of such classic authors as Wilkie Collins, Dickens, A.C. Doyle and M.R. James etc. It's full of styles, motifs, little references, names etc that will be familiar to fans of this area of literature. My personal favourite segments are those featuring the testimony of John Montague; with such a name it shouldn't surprise anybody to discover the style during these segments is an almost perfect homage to the ghost stories of Montague Rhodes James. It's a style I've seen attempted many times (I've tried it myself), but Harwood nails it flawlessly, bringing to mind stories like Count Magnus, The Mezzotint, Lost Hearts and others. If the book had been able to maintain its creepy, portentous atmosphere throughout I'd have given it 5 stars but the last third, as it attempts to resolve the various strands of mystery, does become a little more pedestrian in style. It's still one of the best book I've read this year so far.
I made it as far as page 34 before giving up on The Seance. I can't tell you if the novel gets around to dealing with the supernatural in a practical way, or is more about a teenage girl dealing with spiritualism and the death of her sister in London of the Victorian Age.
It wouldn't make any difference to me if this was a classical ghost story or not if the story grabbed me. Either Hardwood is a tedious writer, or his editors approved the first 50 pages being tedious.
The entire novel reads like a prologue better off being cut: "I had hoped that Mama would be content with regular messages from Alma but as the autumn advanced and the days grew shorter, the old haunted look crept back into her eyes ..."
Events are summed up and skimmed through as if Hardwood is in a hurry to get somewhere, but as near as I can tell, the entire novel is written like this. A magnificent cover design wasted on a book I'm abandoning and an author I'll probably never read again, unless I need a sleeping agent.
How do you like your Victorian gothic ghost story mysteries? What makes it cut the mustard? Do you need a big old ramshackle, spooky mansion? What about a haunted wood with the ghost of a monk that if you see you are like as not to die? And don't forget spiritualism, lighting strikes, menacing villains, untimely death, clairvoyance. a suit of armour, a slow building but not plodding plot reminiscent of Wilkie Collins The woman in white and don't forget mesmerism. Well John Harwood has managed to recapture this in a story that could have been written in the Victorian times. It is brooding and has plenty of twists and turns that will keep you guessing until the end. The multiple narrators which at the start felt to me like stories within themselves all came together and were interwoven with some skill by the author. All in all a very satisfying read. For me it captures the feeling and the genre in buckets. 4 ****
I rated John Harwood's debut novel, , 2 stars, but this second novel is definitely a big improvement, and kept me interested (and creeped out) the entire time I was reading it.
The Seance is certainly a send up of all the classic Victorian gothics of the 19th century, (without all the flowery and overly melodramatic dialogue). Harwood's prose is almost flawless in it's execution, and he is a master in drawing the reader into an implausible world and making them believers in it.
From the very first paragraph, I was hooked on the story, and could hardly bare to put it down late last night, even though I was too sleepy to continue. Yes, it was that kind of good, and deliciously spooky as well. I would have given it a full 5 stars had the ending been as tightly woven as the rest.
Thanks to my GR friend Amy S. for pointing me in the direction of this one. It was certainly one of the better gothics I've picked up in 2011.
After a somewhat dry and uninspiring start, this book developed into an excellently crafted and superbly chilling cross between a period mystery and a ghost story. I was impressed with the author's handling of both plot and characterisation; though the narrative is composed of personal accounts written by different characters at different times, it flows perfectly, and the ending ties up a great deal of loose ends without seeming implausible. The only thing I was unsure about was the juxtaposition of Eleanor Wraxford's suffering at the hands of her husband with the ghosts-and-spirits creepiness of the rest of the story - the former was frightening in a very human way and I don't think it sat too comfortably within a pleasurably spooky read like this.
I enjoyed this quite a bit. It was a good mystery, and each time I thought I knew which way it was going, it went a totally different way. By the end, it all made sense though. I thought the writing was very good, and I really enjoyed the Victorian setting. It felt right to read this in October. Thanks to my friends for an excellent buddy-read as well!
The Séance was a nice little gothic story will all the usual tropes of the genre; a haunted house, a haunted heroine, and a mystery. While I did find the second act much too long, and the ending of the story had a few holes in it, it was a mostly enjoyable tale that did hold a lot of tragedy, a dash of suspense, and just a tinge of death.
The story is initially told from the narrative of Constance Langton and her unhappy adolescent years caring for her mother as she grieves her youngest child. After her suicide, and feeling that she doesn’t have anything left, Constance finds she is the last remaining female relative of the current owner of Wraxford Hall, and she is due to inherit the hall and the Monks Woods surrounding it. The lawyer for the estate, John Montague, comes to find Constance and to tell her about the troubled history surrounding the Hall, and begs her to destroy the home once and for all.
Sell the hall unseen; burn it to the ground and plough the earth with salt, if you will; but never live there.
We then switch to John Montague’s narrative, and then we hear from Eleanor Unwin, who later becomes Nell Wraxford. Their narrative tells the tale of Cornelius Wraxford’s disappearance, and his nephew Magus taking over the Hall, and then his disappearance, along with Nell (his wife) and their daughter. This is where it all becomes quite confusing, with Nell framed for the murder of Magnus, as well as her child, but Constance believes that neither are really dead, and that she herself is the daughter of Nell Wraxford. There is a lot of attempting framing, diversions, and lies, and it all seems overly complicated at times. I was surprised at the ending, but then I was left to wonder what it was all for really. I mean, Nell did escape from a horribly emotionally abusive relationship, but why did Magnus fake his own death, and what did he really believe came of Nell? The final confrontation at Wraxford Hall did feel a bit contrived towards the end.
Eleanor, or Nell, was the perfect Gothic heroine. Since I just studied the Female Gothic, there were a lot of patters I could see, specially her seeing marriage as a way out of her dire situation, and how she was trapped inside her home with the baby all the time who people felt she was building an unhappy attachment too. There was also her fear of being put in an asylum, by her mother or her husband, and trying to determine whether she herself is seeing things or if she does have some kind of ability. The supernatural element was more subdued that I would have liked to see, but in the end it served Nell’s rouse about her disappearance. But still, it left a lot unanswered about this side of the story.
The novel was well written and had some very thorough characterisation, but the mystery itself was a tad convoluted, and the ending wasn’t the climax I was hoping for.
The Séance was a case of mistaken judging-by-cover. I proclaim that I'm savvier than buying a book based on the design of its marketing leaf, so I must add that I did read the synopsis, as well. But it mislead me too.
John Harwood is a beautiful writer - he truly captures landscape, and is gifted in the art of description. But the plot itself was over-processed with a very large finale fizzle. I felt that the story was humdrum. The Victorian research was brilliant and even the story had potential - but it just lacked in that pull-factor. I held on because I'm an author who loves a talented word conceptualist - and I was lured by his skill. However, the creative aspect needed a caffeine boost.
I recommend this story to aspiring authors seeking writing models, but not to the reader seeking entertainment. ~ Ashlyn Hunt
Almost the best thing I can say about this book is "I liked the cover". It's a pastiche of the great Victorian Gothic novel, with overtones of Wilkie Collins. Sadly, the great Victorian public had more patience and more time on their hands than I do, and had also been less exposed to popular culture (there having been less of it around at the time) and were thus possibly less able to predict every. Last. Word of the storyline. There are no twists and no surprises: it does exactly what it says on the tin.[return][return]To be fair, I quite enjoyed the first section, the saga of poor, sad Constance with her unloving father and her melancholic mother and how her urge to help said mother leads her to the fatal path of spiritualism, but as disaster and woe piled on disaster and woe I was, once again, irresistibly reminded of Edward Gorey. When the perspective shifted and the next narrator took up the story I found myself skipping and, in the end, just read the last section, in which Constance picks up the narrative again, and found that, actually, I had missed almost nothing at all.[return][return]I will give it credit for this. On learning that her nursemaid's mother had had five children die, Constance naturally assumes that she must have been even more grief-stricken than Constance's own mother, who had lost only one child. "But no, said Annie, there had been no time for mourning; her mother had been too busy looking after the rest of them." Melancholia was and, I suppose, still is, strictly a middle-class privilege.
Here comes Wraxford Hall, and estate with a past...
First of all, The Seance was a buddy-read, and a very enjoyable one 😀
Then, it is a very fine mystery novel set in Victorian times. There is even an epigraph before the first narrative begins: speak about a classy book (well, I confess I had to check in a dictionary what an epigraph is).
At the end, when everything appears to have received an explanation, you realize you still have a lot of uncertainties left on your plate. Craftily done Mr Harwood 👏
There's a good story in here, but it's buried under an excess of description, meandering plot lines and stock Victorian characters. The female characters are especially disappointing -cardboard cutouts of the "plucky, but overwrought" stereotype, who agonize over everything and "almost faint" several times per chapter. That said, the author writes beautifully and his mastery of moment and atmosphere is remarkable. I'm looking forward to reading more of his work.
3.5 With a wonderful atmosphere that manages to take you to another time and place, and a plot that unravels little by little. I admit that when I started reading I believed that the story would go another way, so I ended up a bit disappointed. I was expecting something more paranormal. Anyway, it is worth for what it is, that the one who was delirious with another type of story was me.
John Harwood's debut novel The Ghost Writer was one of those novels that will go down as a favorite of mine, so naturally when Harwood's second novel , The Séance, was recently released, I could not wait to read it.
The Séance is set in Victorian England and has all the elements which make for a great gothic mystery. There is a cursed run down mansion, a ghostly suit of armor, lightening bolts that strike out the blue, apparitions and other strange phenomena.
Constance Langton is introduced early in the novel. She grows up in a house marked by death. Constance is a lonely girl living with her distant father, and a mother who has never recovered from the death of her infant daughter. Hoping to help her mother recover from her depression Constance becomes interested in seances. Constance pretends to be the voice of her departed baby sister. Constance hopes her mother will benefits by hearing from the lost child in the afterlife. She then convinces her mother to attend a séance. Unfortunately, this ends with disaster.
Soon after Constance becomes the heir to a mansion. She is advised to sell it sight unseen or to burn it down. Years before a family disappeared at Wraxford Hall and the mansion is believed to be cursed. The story then moves on and the reader learns about the tragic events that happened at Wraxford Hall.
The story is told from three different points of view: Constance Langton, John Montague who advises her to sell the mansion sight unseen. The third point of view character is Eleanor Unwin, a young woman much like Constance with psychic powers that seem to want to destroy her.
The story is full of twist and turns, and sometimes I found it a little tough to keep track of who was who. Despite this The Séance is a chilling, creepy novel to enjoy, preferably in the daylight.
no estuvo mal. me gustó y me pareció buena la obra. tampoco voy a decir que es muy aterradora porque no lo es, pero sí incluye algunos aspectos paranormales, la trama lleva una buena evolución aunque pudo sacar mayor fuerza todavía y explotar más ciertos elementos, pero no te deja indiferente. está dividida en varias partes, donde enlazamos tres historias importantes: constance lanton, que vive obsesionada con el asunto del espiritismo y tiene que lidiar con un padre que no cree en ello y con su madre que vive encerrada en el dolor de haber perdido a su hija alma; Eleanor Irwin, una chica asustadiza e insegura que inesperadamente es llevada a wraxford después de haber discutido con su madre por no dejarla contraer matrimonio y al ser echada de casa, y de john montague. En cada historia vemos que los saltos temporales cambian mientras se reconstruye el rompecabezas, y de cómo es que wraxford conecta esas historias. De mis favoritas, me gustó la evolución del personaje de eleanor, un gran cambio desde que la conocemos hasta el pleno final del libro. Como dije antes, se pudo haber explotado más la historia, por ejemplo el aspecto paranormal, que si bien no asustó, fue decayendo al avanzar la historia. aún así la recomiendo; puede resultar enredosa por los narrradores, o que de pronto te pierdes un poco, pero el misterio de la mansión lo vale, porque te deja intrigado hasta el final.
What a wonderful Victorian mystery, full of dread and that constant heavy feeling that something terrible is about to happen and well, something terrible does always happen, though not as one would expect. I loved this novel, probably more for what it did in showing the sad, true plight of Victorian women of the same class as the two narrators in this story, than for the horror of "THE LIE"--which is one of the big themes of this novel. How our lies and secrets keep us separated from the good that can come from living an open honest life.
This is my first Harwood novel, but it won't be my last. The author has a gift for his fine and delicate techniques in characterization. All his characters are so well drawn that I don't think I will ever forget them, even the smaller secondary characters.
And of course, he gave life to the Gothic form, by presenting us with a big old crumbling mansion that was just as much a character as the people. Ah, that house. I hope it has fallen in by now! It seems so real in my mind. But it is the life of the Victorian woman here that is center foremost in my mind. What a horrible, ghastly tale of two women almost destroyed by a culture that deemed them property or burdens.
What the hell. I'm having some mixed feelings here. I absolutely loved the middle of this book. But it had a really slow start and quite frankly, a shitty ending. The villian in this book is such a huge asshat, for a great number of years and what happens to him in the end is nowhere near what he deserved (and kinda blah), and the damage he has done is irreversible so because of that the book could not end on a positive note. Sure the name of an innocent woman is cleared, but after 20 years of people calling you a murderer and the guy who framed you dead, it's not enough. I've been reading so slow lately and have put too much time in this book to be disappointed with it :(
4.5 Stars. I liked this book very much. Loved the writing, excellent storyline, interesting subject in a dark and Victorian setting.
The narrators did a wonderful job, which helped to bring the book alive. A little confusing during the parts describing the suit of armor and the mayhem that took place at Wexford Hall, but ended up with a satisfying ending.
The book started off very intriguingly, and the first two sections kept the story moving along, and leading to anticipation of where the book was going. But when the third section hit, the story just began to get confusing, as it kept jumping back further in time, and bog down in a section that should have been half as long. The story picked up again towards the end of the fifth and beginning of the sixth sections, but again just felt like it dragged again until the end. The writing itself was mostly solid, but the narrative was like a network TV series with too many unnecessary pages that just felt like filler to extend the size of the book.
Beaucoup aimé ! La fin m'a toutefois paru un peu longuette. Je craignais qqch dans le style de "Angelica" d'Arthur Philipps qui m'avait déçue mais ce roman-ci est nettement meilleur (à mon avis). Un bon 3.5*
“The Séance� is a wonderfully mysterious novel set in Victorian England. It is an utterly enchanting read that draws the reader into its magic and then takes them on a ride of apparitions and spooky encounters.
The most striking thing about the book is its voice. Very restrained and personable, the first-person narrative puts one right in the head of the main characters. Told in part through diary entries - much the same way Bram Stoker fashioned his classic “Dracula� - the story unfolds over various generations and through varying viewpoints as we learn about a strange family curse. Stylistically, this is the most delicately written book I have read in a long time, yet at the same time it is exactly this delicacy that makes you shudder at times, as evil perspires through the narrative and the characters slowly dive into the mysterious unknown that lies before them.
I have loved every minute of “The Séance� and cannot stop but shower it in praise. This is heartfelt gothic horror at its best with fine nuances and cool plot twists.
Honestamente cuando empecé este libro supuse que trataba sobre algo totalmente diferente a lo que resultó, no me quejo, realmente me gustó y disfruté mucho de esta historia
Ubicado a finales del siglo XIX, este libro nos cuenta la historia de Constance Langton, quien recibe en herencia una propiedad que tiene una larga historia de misterios y muertes, no todas en circunstancias del todo claras.
Toda la primera parte del libro nos cuenta la historia de Constance, para después, a través de dos voces diferentes contarnos una historia de clarividentes, fantasmas, sesiones espiritistas y demás hechos por demás extraños.
La historia es bastante entretenida y tengo que decir que me tuvo intrigada todo el tiempo, sin embargo, en algunos momentos me parecía algo rebuscada o extraña, pero a pesar de eso, disfruté el ver como se revelaba el misterio, conocer los hechos y lo que hubo detrás de unas misteriosas desapariciones y muertes.
Bastante recomendable para quienes les gusta el género