Présentation de l'éditeur :
Like all English villages, the quiet and charming Thorpe Amberley in the heart of the Suffolk countryside has its secrets, its mysteries and its legends. It also has its traditions, such as the Tamberley Morris Men, a dysfunctional band of blow-ins, mainly professionals, who rehearse every Thursday and drink in the local pub.
Nothing much has served to disturb the tranquillity of Thorpe Amberley for centuries.
Until now. A stunningly beautiful American woman comes to the village to teach at a nearby school, and her arrival coincides with the resurrection of deadly seeds of jealousy, evil and murder.
When the village is rocked by a series of gruesome and apparently ritualistic killings, it soon becomes clear that the local police are up against dark forces which they are wholly unequipped to deal with. Unlikely help comes from the shamanistic connection with a Patagonian Machi through the Morris Men's Squire and the unexpected assistance of an ex-NYPD policeman.
A hunt for not one, but two serial killers, is on, and Thorpe Amberley will never be the same again.
Biographie de l'auteur :
Alan S. Blood worked in advertising and the Civil Service, in London, before qualifying as a teacher from the University of Reading. He enjoyed a long, distinguished career in this profession. Alan now devotes his time to writing novels, plays and poetry and has widely travelled the world, especially undertaking research in Chile where some of this novel is set. He was a Cotswold Morris Dancer with two different 'sides', respectively: the 'Mayflower Morris Men' of Essex and the 'First Sedgley Morris Men' in the West Midlands. He currently lives in Powys, Wales.
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