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The Crowfield Demon

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BfK No. 189 - July 2011

This issue's cover illustration is from Lia's Guide to Winning the Lottery by Keren David. Thanks to Frances Lincoln for their help with this July cover.

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By clicking here you can view, print or download the fully artworked Digital Edition of BfK 189 July 2011.

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The Crowfield Demon

Pat Walsh
(Chicken House)
400pp, 978-1906427634, RRP £6.99, Paperback
8-10 Junior/Middle
Buy "The Crowfield Demon (Crowfield 2)" on Amazon

This sequel to Pat Walsh’s The Crowfield Curse returns us to Crowfield barely three months later, and if orphan Will thought that evil had been vanquished from his adopted home, he soon has to wake up and smell the caudle. A stomach-turning encounter with the Dark King in disguise shows that danger lurks once more in those parts. The Abbey building has begun mysteriously to crumble, and as the monks try desperately to repair the damage, Will finds a truly terrifying object buried under the floor of a side chapel that could spell the end of Crowfield for ever.

Once again Pat Walsh brings the cloistered world of Crowfield vividly to life and we learn more absorbing snippets about medieval life along the way. Will is an engaging hero, and the concept of ancient pagan spirits which lie trapped and bent on revenge beneath the foundations of the Christian abbey is a compelling one. There’s even a nice nod to Dan Brown in the feverish speculation about the mysterious bowl that Will unearths. If it were a little shorter, The Crowfield Demon would better sustain a sense of real peril. The demon itself is somehow not as frightening as it might be, such that I began to wonder if it had a genuine grievance about a great big abbey being built without planning permission, smack on top of its spiritual home. But there’s still plenty to enjoy here. And I love now knowing what caudle is.

Reviewer: 
Caroline Sanderson
3
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