The Tale of Halcyon Crane
Books | Fiction / Ghost
4
(121)
Wendy Webb
A young woman travels alone to a remote island to uncover a past she never knew was hers in this thrilling modern ghost storyWhen a mysterious letter lands in Hallie James's mailbox, her life is upended. Hallie was raised by her loving father, having been told her mother died in a fire decades earlier. But it turns out that her mother, Madlyn, was alive until very recently. Why would Hallie's father have taken her away from Madlyn? What really happened to her family thirty years ago?In search of answers, Hallie travels to the place where her mother lived, a remote island in the middle of the Great Lakes. The stiff islanders fix her first with icy stares and then unabashed amazement as they recognize why she looks so familiar, and Hallie quickly realizes her family's dark secrets are enmeshed in the history of this strange place. But not everyone greets her with such a chilly reception—a coffee-shop owner and the family's lawyer both warm to Hallie, and the possibility of romance blooms. And then there's the grand Victorian house bequeathed to her—maybe it's the eerie atmosphere or maybe it's the prim, elderly maid who used to work for her mother, but Hallie just can't shake the feeling that strange things are starting to happen . . .In The Tale of Halcyon Crane, Wendy Webb has created a haunting story full of delicious thrills, vibrant characters, and family secrets.
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More Details:
Author
Wendy Webb
Pages
352
Publisher
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Published Date
2010-03-30
ISBN
1429922532 9781429922531
Ratings
Google: 3
Community ReviewsSee all
"4.5 stars
Wendy Webb is one of my go-to authors when I want something ghostly mysterious - some spookiness, a little horror, a little thriller, a dash of romance, and a lot of mystery - all set in a gorgeous setting. And in my personal opinion, this one is by far the best of those that I have read so far! My only complaint is that the climax falls a teeny tiny bit short of the set-up, which is why I docked a half star from my rating.
That being said, my favorite part of all her novels so far has been the setting, which are always characters in their own right. The actual towns and manors the author creates may not exist in real life, but if you believe in the idea of Old Gods, Lake Superior is a Queen among Them - beautiful, terrifying, deadly, and full of ghosts."