![]() ![]() I’m surprised this hasn’t been made into a film it would be wildly successful. ![]() While you suspect some of Miss Stewart’s machinations, the ending is a shocker. The creepy factor builds deliciously, in the best kind of country-house mystery fashion, and you’re not sure exactly what horrors will emerge. Taylor takes his time letting us get to know Tom and better empathize with his frustrations. What a fun read! The Reaping is a slow burn. Tom finishes the portrait and hopes he is done with Woolvercombe House for good…only to find neither he, nor his family have escaped Miss Stewart clutches. Then there are the five mysterious nuns living on the property, who Tom discovers are not exactly models of piety. The ailing Miss Stewart, whose garish makeup fails to hide the sight and smells of her sour old age the sly manservant, Carl the too-efficient secretary, Mrs. Tom’s love of his craft is reenergized and, inexplicably, so his libido…but Tom gets a creepy vibe about the rest of Woolvercombe’s inhabitants. He seizes the chance, and he and the shy Catherine warm to each other (“warm” is an understatement). ![]() Life is uninspiring until Tom gets the lucrative opportunity of a lifetime: spend a week at Woolvercombe House painting the beautiful Catherine. His relationship with his globe hopping girlfriend, Ilona, is on the rocks. Tom has all but given up his dreams of being an artist and settled for a steady career as shopkeeper to best support his young children. ![]()
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