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The Monster's Lament
The Monster's Lament
May 14, 2025 6:10 PM

Author:Robert Edric

The Monster's Lament

April 1945. While the Allied Forces administer the killing blow to Nazi Germany, at home London’s teeming underworld of black marketeers, pimps, prostitutes, conmen and thieves prepare for the coming peace. But the man the newspapers call the English Monster, the self-procaimed Antichrist, Aleister Crowley, is making preparations for the future too: for his immortality.

For Crowley’s plan to work, he has to depend upon one of London’s Most Wanted, ambitious gangland boss Tommy Fowler, who, presiding over a crumbling empire, can still get you anything you want - for a price.

And what Crowley wants is a young man, Peter Tait, in Pentonville Prison under sentence of death for murder. Convinced of his innocence but unable to prove it, his only chance of survival lies in the hands of one detective struggling against the odds to win a desperate appeal that has little chance of success.

The Monster’s Lament is an extraordinary journey through a ruined landscape towards an ending more terrible and all-consuming than any of its participants can have imagined. When you’re used to fighting monsters abroad, it is easy to overlook the monsters closer to home…

Reviews

A wonderfully edgy piece of wartime noir

—— D.J. Taylor , Independent

Macabre twists keep the pages turning

—— James Urquhart , Financial Times

A masterly, highly evocative, multi-layered tale

—— Mail on Sunday (Eire)

Fabulously atmospheric

—— Bookseller

Edric's world, though often unsavoury, is also curiously compelling. Lured into its shady precincts, you're unlikely to want to leave.

—— David Grylls , Sunday Times

A darkly disturbing novel

—— Hull Daily Mail

A connoisseur of shadows, Edric is excellent on what is truly "devilish" in human beings

—— The Sunday Times

Edric is a novelist who makes his own rules and can't be compared with anyone else. The world he has made in this unsettling novel is both familiar and deeply weird; there's a genuine sense of menace beneath the hysteria and superstition

—— The Times

Another brilliant offering from Edric

—— The Lady

An intriguing scenario which Edric develops with polish and intelligence, immersing himself in small-town Edwardian England

—— Daily Mail

Terrific. Suspicion, resentment and misunderstanding haunt this city. Richly atmospheric

—— Sunday Telegraph

This centenary year, so many more female writers have chosen The Great War as their central theme ...there is WAKE by Anna Hope, chronicling the lives of women battling with postwar loss ...I welcome these, and more, for their stories and the history lessons they incorporate

—— Arifa Akbar, The Independent

Poignant and powerful, it's a must-read.

—— Fabulous Magazine

Anna Hope reveals a tragic connection between three women living i 1920s London in her impressive debut

—— Good Housekeeping Magazine

Hope weaves her three characters’ workaday narratives together, building scenes that wear their research lightly …The women’s lives come at us in a present-tense narration that keeps the book easy to read, letting the characters’ thoughts bob to the surface of the text in italics, as if in a nod towards the modernism that was brewing in that very period.

—— Independent

A very simple book which elicits very complicated emotions ...luscious, impressive, moving.

—— Julia Kingsford

It's an unusual story, told well and written delicately. The women and the world they inhabit are beautifully drawn. It tells us that life can continue to be lived even after terrible loss.

—— RONAN BENNETT, Whitbread award-winning author and creator of Channel Four’s ‘Top Boy’

Hope’s unblinking prose is reminiscent of Vera Brittain’s classic memoir “Testament of Youth” in its depiction of the social and emotional fallout, particularly on women, of the Great War.

—— New York Times

Wake is a staggeringly good first novel, packed with soulful insight, universal emotions and those intimate small details which add more depth and meaning to a picture than the brutal sweep of a broad brush.

—— Lancashire Evening Post

It’s hard for me to believe that this amazing, touching book is a debut novel. Absolutely recommend and already on the run for a spot in my top 10.

—— www.thebooksmugglers.com

It is a powerful read; you can almost see the endless mud of the trenches, and sense the fear of those young men.

—— pagesandteablog.wordpress.com

Anna Hope wove her spell and managed to conjure up an intriguing tale, quite rich with emotion that held me entranced until the last page. I can’t wait to see what she does next.

—— lynnsbooks.wordpress.com

Wake is a brilliant debut novel, deeply moving, well-plotted and engrossing.

—— http://ourbookreviewsonline.blogspot.co.uk

This is such a brilliant book; one that is both beautifully written and emotionally involving, with a fascinating plot and wonderful characters who pluck at your heartstrings on every page.

—— http://bookssnob.wordpress.com

I have no doubt that Wake is going to be included in my Top Ten books of 2014, I know that it's only January, but this is a book that has had a huge effect on me.

—— randomthingsthroughmyletterbox.blogspot.co.uk

The only regret I have is that I didn’t read this book sooner. WAKE is luxury. Pure luxury.

—— http://missmoretalks.wordpress.com

She manages to capture every single detail, every emotion and every sound.

—— http://lauraslittlebookblog.blogspot.co.uk

Wake is that rare and beautiful thing: a first novel that sings with such power and grace that it lifts itself effortlessly from the pack. Powerful, passionate, compassionate, it marks the rising of a new star in the literary firmament. Anna Hope is here to stay.

—— M.C. Scott - Author of Rome and chair of the Historical Writers Association

Intricately researched and beautifully written, with the kind of restrained yet emotional prose one expects from a seasoned author. Its characters, too, have a depth and quiet tragedy one rarely finds in debut fiction. In this centenary year commemorating the outbreak of war, there've been many novels about the conflict:Wake is without doubt one of the best.

—— Hannah Beckerman - Huffington Post

A masterclass in historical fiction

—— Observer

Impressive ... A heart-breaking tale of grief and guilt

—— Psychologies Magazine

[Abrams is] good on the squirm-inducing detail of physical discomforts and injuries

—— Siobhan Murphy , Metro

Though Fobbit is a satire…its value lies more in the fact that it’s a very detailed, very informative portrait of the madness in Iraq in the early years of the American occupation. The sights and sounds are adroitly rendered, the damnable heat skilfully rendered in text. There are times when you can almost smell the gore on the concrete

—— Jonathan O'Brien , Sunday Business Post

An enjoyable and alternative take on war

—— UK Regional Press Syndication
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