Why a Booktrail?
2000s: Ann Cleeves is the best guide there is to the Shetland Isles. Welcome to fictional Ravenswick…
2000s: Ann Cleeves is the best guide there is to the Shetland Isles. Welcome to fictional Ravenswick…
It’s New Year’s Eve – a lonely outcast Magnus Tait waits for visitors who never come. However the very next morning the body of a murdered teenage girl is discovered nearby, and Magnus is the number one suspect.
Inspector Jimmy Perez comes to investigate and at first enjoys the Shetland warm welcome but the more he digs into the past of these communities, the more he finds he is unwelcome.
Everyone is pointing a finger at Magnus Tait but who is pointing and why? Doors are being locked and black ravens are circling in the skies above.
If you have never been to the Shetland Isles or know much about it then you might not want to base all of your opinion on the nature of the island featured in the novel – for Ann Cleeves’ Shetland is a dark and mysterious place with a sense of foreboding and a landscape of dark empty fields and the quiet ripple of the darker waters – the only sound that of the waves lapping at the rocky crags.
The subject of pedophilia is difficult to read about in any setting but on a small and remote island community it seems much more darker and tragic. The atmosphere throughout is one of extreme claustrophobia and coldness in all its forms. As with Ann Cleeves though, this is brought across in often amusing and dry ways –
The Shetland Islands community is a closed one – extremely suspicious of outsiders but with a bogeyman of sorts within their number. But there is culture and folkore too with mention of the annual uphellyaa festival which adds to the intrigue and traditions of the area and beliefs of its people.
Susan @thebooktrailer:
Just love Ann Cleeves. The writing, the way she transports you to the places of which she writes. Ravenswick sounds very real – you can tell she loves the Shetlands and cares deeply for its people, likes to get under their skin and really understand what she is writing about. The television versions are also excellent but there’s always the joy of creating Ann Cleeves’ world in your own mind when you read this and the story of a closed community and its secrets is a favourite of mine.
Twitter: @AnnCleeves
Facebook: /anncleeves
Web: anncleeves.com
Back to Results