GUD Magazine's review of The Tea House

The Tea House The Tea House
by Paul Elwork
431377
GUD's review  
rating: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
bookshelves: reviewed_by_gud, reviews_by_debbie

Paul Elwork's "The Tea House" is a bold first novel, entering the strange, secretive world of two children who discover a way to convince others they can contact the dead. The book's based loosely on the real-life Fox sisters, notorious mediums who seem to have begun the whole table-rapping craze. It sets out how siblings Emily and Michael get more and more involved in the private griefs of the adults around them. Rapidly, the two move far out of their depth, struggling with adults who depend on them for emotional support, desperately wanting to believe what they know isn't true. What starts as a fun game leads to despair and death.

Although Emily is the table-rapper, it's Michael who manipulates her and all those around them, cajoling then bullying her into co-operating. We see scenes from Michael's point of view, but his motivations remain obscure. He's almost fierce in not caring for other people. It's power over them he seeks, regardless of the emotional cost. ...more
Like this review?   yes    flag



comments (showing 1-1 of 1) (1 new)

dateDown_arrow    newest »

message 1: by GUD (new)
06/16/2008 04:27AM

431377 To win the review copy of "The Tea House", tell us in comments at http://www.gudmagazine.com/review/archiv...
which dead person you'd most like to chat with--and what question you'd really want answered.

Contest open to UK/EU only, and closes on 23rd June 2008 (midnight pacific time). You have to be in it to win it!


back to top

all of GUD's books »