Praise for Poet’s Cottage (Please see Poet’s Cottage section for more reviews.)’
‘It’s testimony to Pennicott’s exquisite prose that just as you think you understand where the characters and stories are heading, your expectations are overturned. I loved this about the novel. What I also loved is that I could see these characters; what they wore, ate, how they walked. I could feel the wind on my face, walk through the misty streets of Pencubitt, and feel the cold embrace of Poet’s Cottage. Pennicott evokes time and place with a light and meaningful touch: a word, a mood, a gesture all bring the past and present lives of those dwelling in the village into acute focus. This is a gorgeous, sometimes harrowing but always moving and deep story that remains with you long after the last page. Simply lovely. A triumph.’
Thank you, Karen Brooks, Australian Author, columnist, journalist, corporate and educational speaker, academic and social commentator.
Inspired by the deeply flawed relationship Enid Blyton had with her own daughters, Josephine Pennicott has created a tale rich with dark goings on worthy of comparison to Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca and vintage Agatha Christie.
Pennicott has built her reputation as a writer of dark fantasy and even nastier crime but this, her first foray into mainstream fiction, is a cracker read. I read this book in one weekend and I promise you this book deserves all the accolades heaped upon it.
thank you, Meredith.
'Gothic mystery a purler
Sometimes you can judge a book by its
cover.'
Thanks to Barbara Farrelly of the South Coast Register for her praise for Poet’s.
Please see Poet’s Cottage section for longer versions of this and other reviews.
‘an imaginative and intricate
work of detective fiction.
It is set in Tasmania
which certainly evokes a
beautiful and poignant
setting.
This is a thoroughly
captivating mystery tale’
Thank you, F.J.O'Dwyer from the
Chronicle (Toowoomba), Toowoomba QLD
07 Apr 2012
“…a haunting tale unfolds. We loved this evocative, gothic debut which flicks between past and present Tasmania. A satisfying read to curl up with on a Saturday afternoon.”
Poet’s Cottage is an accomplished, engrossing novel with fine language and powerful descriptions of the small town inhabitants of Pencubbit in both past and modern times. Most of all, in creating the damaged and damaging Pearl, the author has created a character so compelling and complex that the image of her lingers just as surely as the strains of music from her gramophone drifted through Poet’s Cottage both before and after her death.
Thank you, Elisabeth Storrs – historical fiction author of The Wedding Shroud
Seen this movie twice and could watch it again and again…a must buy for the cold nights alone..
Dear Stephanie, yes, it has a lovely message.Are you going to book a ticket to India? We shall have to grow old and beautiful together at the Hotel Marigold. I shall be the eccentric in the room upstairs who never ventures out and is found eventually clothed in cobwebs and ash surrounded by all my novels. I guess, I can do that here in my garden shed and save the plane fare but I do love India. xx