Louise Mumford
HOLD on tight, turn up the volume, and head for Solstice, this
summer’s red-hot festival where music, mystery – and deadly menace – are top
of the playlist!
It’s a case of Stephen King’s creepy horror meets the frenzied
vibes of Glastonbury as Louise Mumford (pictured below) whisks us away to the remote and
sweltering valleys of Wales for a seasonal psychological suspense thriller in
which a fun music festival turns into the stuff of nightmares.
Former English teacher Mumford – whose two gripping novels
Sleepless and The Safe House were Kindle bestsellers – turns up the heat to
boiling point in this tense, locked-room style trip into the heart of a
darkness that threatens to engulf two naïve young women on the longest, and
hottest, night of the year.
So sit back, pour yourself a long, cool glass of vino, and
meet 20-year-old part-time library assistant Libby Corrigan who can’t believe
her luck when she wins two tickets to the biggest event of the summer...
Solstice, a much sought-after music festival which celebrates the longest day
of the year.
Eager to escape her problems for a few days, Libby hopes a
weekend of sun, fun and festivities along with Dawn will be ‘the start of a
whole new her’ and that she will emerge from ‘the shadow’ that had always been
cast by her mother.
But what promised to be an exciting trip quickly turns into a head-on meeting with the macabre. The Blake family who own the festival prove to be scarily weird, the scorching heatwave intensifies, the music becomes wilder, and the festival-goers are increasingly unpredictable. And when Dawn goes missing, Libby worries that something terrible has happened to her. As Libby’s past starts to unravel and she learns more about the festival’s dark origins, she begins to fear that something might happen to her too…
With an intriguing and increasingly disturbing mystery
bubbling beneath the surface, and a sense of foreboding that grips from the sinister
opening chapter right through to the shocking dénouement, this page-turner is
music to the ears of readers who love a high concept thriller.
Mumford’s descriptive powers bring extra intensity to an
ingeniously imagined festival buried deep in the countryside where the world
seems out of kilter, revellers’ phones are silenced, the music is overwhelming,
and a claustrophobic atmosphere thick with youthful hormones and hedonism
quickly turns poisonous when Dawn disappears.
And as the tension ratchets up, and stories about a woman
called Tess Sanderson who went missing at Solstice twenty years ago swirl
through the action, a malign brand of folklore is pitched perfectly against the
author’s superb evocation of the rampant excitement and sheer self-indulgence
of music festivals. Add on the unsettling backdrop of angry locals, and the troubling
presence of the Blake family who own and run the festival, and you have the
perfect storm for a cracking summer reading escape!
(HQ, paperback, £9.99)
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