Another sweeping novel of power and compassion from
this exceptional writer. Madeleine Horrocks wanted nothing more than
to be famous. Pretty and outspoken, she often alarmed her best
friend Amy by expressing doubts - about parents, teachers and, most
of all, religion, which according to their strict 1950s Catholic
upbringing in Rivington Cross seemed certain, Amy thought, to send
them both to Hell. What, after all, was wrong with being a
Protestant, Madeleine would ask? Or a Jew? The good-looking boy they
both noticed on their way to school was, it was rumoured, Jewish -
his family having fled from Poland at the beginning of the war.
Father Sheahan, the whiskey-soaked priest from the local church, had
discovered that his secret past was catching up with him, and went
in fear of his life. Amy, too, had a secret - a secret which caused
her to visit the Bell House, an ancient charnel house outside the
village. As they grow up, this place of death becomes a meeting
place for the friends, who have to learn that differences in
religion can cause unexpected heartache. |