The book features multiple eras in the 19th century told through the perspectives of Hester, a servant, and Louise, the daughter of a wealthy doctor. Their experiences, separated by 40 years or more, center around a series of caves and subterranean chambers that envelop Morvoren House, an old seaside structure that conjures dark imagery of “The Old Dark House”.
In the first segments, Hester is introduced as a troubled servant who is addicted to alcohol. She hides her secret addiction from her newest employer, a troubled old woman named Louise Pinecroft. As Hester settles into her new role as Louise's nurse, she discovers some weird rituals and safeguarding from the house's staff. Is Louise mentally insane, or is there some dark force prowling the hallways? Along with Hester's new hire orientation comes a dark secret she keeps in a trunk. Through this tucked-away treasure, readers begin learning about Hester's prior job caring for a wealthy family in a different part of England. Her firing from the role is mysterious, enhanced more by bloody clothes that Hester keeps in her trunk. This history is presented in the book's second segment.
In a somewhat confusing timeline, readers are then thrust back to Louise's experiences as a young woman living at Morvoren House. Here, her father is practicing some bizarre medical treatments on prisoners he's acquired from the local township. The prisoners, all doomed to die from various illnesses, are kept in moist caves awaiting the good doctor's medical treatments – as neanderthal as they may be. Here is when readers learn about evil pixies that live underground, waiting for the perfect time to perform an Invasion of the Body Snatchers act of creating a “pod person” to replace the captured victim. It's weird, scary, entertaining...trust me.
The House of Whispers does require a great deal of patience as the story twists and turns through these different eras. At one point, I felt very connected to Hester, and then by the book's second half, that intimacy evaporated, replaced by a newfound fascination with Louise. It blends well, albeit a bit jarring to lose that connection with the character. Overall, it's a well-developed plot rich with imagery, chills, and imagination. There aren't a lot of evil pixie stories in horror. There's magic in that.
Get The House of Whispers HERE.

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