Dismissed from the London hospital where he works, a young doctor reluctantly accepts a position as a private physician at the isolated and unwelcoming Welsh estate of Plas Helyg during the summer of 1783.
When Henry Talbot first arrives at Lord Julian Tresilian’s estate with little more than his doctor’s bag and the clothes on his back, both the residents of Plas Helyg and Penhelyg, the neighboring mining village, are less than agreeable and, in some instances, downright aggressive toward him. While this behavior could easily be written off as cultural animosity between the Welsh and the English, Henry can’t help but feel that there’s something else amiss. With the gatehouse where he was meant to stay falling into irreparable shambles, the lady of the house struggling to maintain a tenuous grip on reality, and signs pointing toward his predecessor’s death having been the result of foul play, Henry turns to Linette Tresilian, Julian’s niece, for help. Linette quickly proves herself to be self-sufficient, stubborn, and thoroughly unconventional for an 18th-century woman. She prefers men’s clothing, has little interest in marriage, keeps the books for the Plas Helyg estate, and spends much of her time looking after the men who toil in Julian’s mines. At first unsure of what to make of one another, Henry and Linette quickly join forces to uncover the dark and dangerous truth that so many of Plas Helyg’s residents have kept secret. Stokes-Chapman has crafted an engaging work of historical fiction that is a love letter to Welsh culture as well as a gripping and atmospheric mystery pitting scientific reason against the supernatural.
A gripping and unsettling gothic novel steeped in Welsh history and folklore.