The land remembers what the living try to forget...
Cora Murphy has always been different. Born into the O'Brien clan of County Clare, she carries a gift that runs through the bloodline-visions that reach across centuries. She's learned to guard this burden carefully. But when a retreat for children like her brings Cora face to face with a brooding Welsh boy named Garryth, something ancient begins to stir. A woman appears in her dreams-a woman who could be her mirror image, living in a seventeenth-century world of cruelty, secret love, and creeping darkness.
Her name is Elspeth. And she has been waiting to be found. As Cora is pulled deeper into Elspeth's story-and closer to the haunted ruins of Leamaneh Castle-she uncovers a centuries-old tragedy that never truly died. It seeped into the stone and into the very ground beneath her feet. And if Cora can't unravel the truth of what happened there, she may never leave its shadow.
A gripping dual-timeline tale of love, legacy, and the darkness that binds them. Perfect for fans of Jean Grainger and Tricia O'Malley.
Series
Language
Place of publication
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 133 mm
Thickness: 34 mm
Weight
ISBN-13
978-1-83700-429-4 (9781837004294)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Stacey Reynolds started writing her first novel, _Raven of the Sea_, in 2015. She was inspired by the beautiful villages of Ireland's west coast--the traditional music, the architecture, the lighthouses, and crumbling ruins. It lit a spark in her that would smolder for years until she was ready. She was a military wife and mother of 5. With a special needs child at home, she began writing at the public library during her son's therapy sessions. Before she married an officer in the Marines, she was a police officer. Her experience in law enforcement aids her in writing from the perspective of a first responder. It also helps with the procedural aspects of some of her stories. She loves what she does. She finds inspiration through traveling, reading, art, and music. She tries to write with the honest and often raw emotions that come from loving and losing.