I
borrowed this title from NetGalley, a review service that I use, having not
heard of the author before. I was attracted to the title by the striking cover
art and the book’s description, with its talk of an isolated village amid a
moor, the devil stalking the fens at night. I was expecting a supernatural
horror and indeed Devil’s Day is billed as such on Amazon. In some ways, this
is an accurate description of the book, it certainly has a supernatural
element, but as far as horror fiction goes it’s a slow burn. Devil’s Day might
more accurately be described as a drama with a deep sense of foreboding.
The
novel’s protagonist, John Pentecrost, is a school teacher who works at a public
school in the south of England. Every year he returns to his family farm in
rural Lancashire to help his father and grandfather bring the sheep down from
the moor and partake in traditional rituals to keep the people and animals of
the local community safe from the devil. The novel begins with John bringing
his new wife, Katherine (Kat), who’s pregnant with their first child, with him
for the first time. John’s grandfather,
popularly known as “the Gaffer”, has just died and his father is getting on in
years, so John – who’s increasingly restless in his job - is thinking of broaching
the subject with Kat of their moving back to Lancashire to take over the
farm.
As the
plot unfolds there are tensions galore. The community John introduces Kat into is
extremely wary of strangers and she struggles to fit in. She finds it difficult
to understand their old ways and some of them clearly think she’s not up to it.
Woodland nearby has recently been burnt down and locals blame a problem family
amongst them, members of which have been in prison, bullied other kids at the
village school, and generally act in an antisocial manner. As the novel unfolds,
it becomes clear that John and other members of his extended family hide dark
secrets.
Reading
Devil’s Day, at first it seems that the superstitions and folklore that the
community adhere to are just that, that this is a remote village, cut off from
the 21st Century that is backwards and quaint. As past secrets are
unearthed, the reader might even conclude that this folklore has been used to
cover up terrible deeds committed by the community’s members. Strange things do
happen, some of which appear to have a supernatural root. By the end of the
novel, and at risk of divulging spoilers, it is up to the reader to decide what
is real and what is not.
This is a
slow burning novel full of evocative and haunting description. The tension and
foreboding ratchets inexorably upwards, but is never gratuitous and not
particularly scary. This is more of an unsettling tale, not least for a city
dweller like myself. I found myself wondering whether there are indeed communities
like this, the kinds of places where if you wandered in and were particularly
unlucky, you might not ever leave. That said, the plot of Devil’s Day did
meander somewhat and the ending seemed rushed.
3 out of
5 stars
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