Author:Martin Day

A First Doctor, Steven and Dodo novel A fireball erupts in the forests of the Ukraine, and when the locals investigate, they find what appears to be a metal coffin at the centre of the devastation. They superstitiously conclude that the casket contains the body of an angel, sent to Earth to give hope to the people. Centuries later, the Doctor and his companions find themselves trapped in Kiev, 1240 a city under attack by the Mongols. They are enforced guests of the governor, Dmitri, whose assistant Yehven believes that if the coffin is desecrated, then all who threaten us will be destroyed. When the coffin is opened by a group of men, a terrifying, skull-faced creature is freed, and kills a member of the group before fleeing. A spate of violent deaths ensure but this creature certainly isnt killing indiscriminately. How is this creature choosing it victims, where has it come from and most importantly, can the Doctor do anything to halt its murderous trail of destruction?
The perfect, absorbing read for poolside pleasure
—— CosmopolitanIt is clearly the product of a remarkable intelligence, combined with a gift for observation and deduction
—— A. L. Kennedy , GuardianA welcome return, for this writer, to novel form, and as a fresh, sophisticated take on the ever-popular dysfunctional family saga
—— Eve Patten , Irish TimesAnne Enright has all she needs in terms of imagination and technique and she's a tremendous phrase maker
—— Adam Mars-Jones , ObserverEnright ambushes as memory does, drawing you into an event and then questioning its reality
—— Sunday TelegraphAt a time when everyone is mirroring everyone else, Enright's style of writing remains singular and instantly identifiable
—— Irish IndependentThis is at once an exciting and an intelligent novel
—— Truth MagazineA colourful story colourfully told
—— Northern Daily RecordFondly and delicately pieces back together what the deconstructors put asunder
—— ObserverDisplaying a playful exuberance wonderfully at odds with the dry, jargon-strewn tradition of academic criticism, this deft, slender volume analyses how novelists pull rabbits out of hats
—— The Economist






