My brother's keeper

Tim Powers, 1952-

Book - 2023

"This is a ghost story. It is a story about werewolves, and things that go bump in the night. It is a story of an ill-fated land, the pathless moors of Northern England so well chronicled in Wuthering Heights. And it is the story of a real family whose destiny it is to deal with this darkly glamorous and dangerous world. When young Emily Brontë helps a wounded man she finds at the foot of an ancient pagan shrine in the remote Yorkshire moors, her life becomes contentiously entwined with his. He is Alcuin Curzon, embittered member of a sect working to eradicate the resurgent plague of lycanthropy in Europe and northern England. But Emily's father, curate of the Haworth village church, is responsible for having unwittingly brought ...a demonic werewolf god to Yorkshire forty years ago-and it is taking possession of Emily's beloved but foolish and dissolute brother. Curzon must regard Emily's family as a dire threat. In spite of being at deadly odds, Emily and Curzon find themselves thrown together in fighting werewolves, confronting pagan gods, even saving each other from the lures of moorland demons. And in a final battle that sweeps from the haunted village of Haworth to a monstrous shrine far out on the moors, the two of them must be reluctant allies against an ancient power that seems likely to take their souls as well as their lives" --

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Subjects
Genres
Paranormal fiction
Werewolf fiction
Fantasy fiction
Novels
Published
Riverdale, NY : Baen Publishing Enterprises [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Tim Powers, 1952- (author)
Physical Description
301 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781982192860
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

World Fantasy Award winner Powers (On Stranger Tides) returns with an impressive mash-up of literary biography and werewolf lore. The Brontë sisters--Emily, Anne, and Catherine--tend to their aging father and wayward brother, Branwell, while trying to make their mark with poems and novels. Their family is haunted, however, by a generation-spanning curse that takes the form of the ghost of a small homeless boy called Welsh. Welsh tempts Branwell into an unwise bargain that offers him protection from other ghosts, but opens up the Brontës to threats from a clan of werewolves out to control England. Armed with courage and imagination, the sisters resist, finding an ally in a one-eyed French Catholic agent of the Huberti, alleged scourge of lycanthropes. Powers gleefully plays with the Brontë family history, tying them to Roman goddesses and ancient cyclopes, and intersperses snippets of their early writing throughout (the major works get only minor nods). Through all the supernatural drama, the shifting family dynamic remains the heart of the story and their domestic travails prove just as harrowing as any paranormal showdown. The result is a treat for Powers's fans and Brontë lovers alike. Agent: Russell Galen, Scovil Galen Ghosh Literary. (Sept.)

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