This is the fourth novel by Alex Marwood that I’ve read. I loved The Wicked Girls, The Killer Next Door, and the Darkest Secret, and The Poison Garden does not disappoint. It fascinates each of Marwood’s books is distinctive and different, all excellent but if you didn’t know, you’d swear they are by different authors. This one is a story about a cult that very much resembles Jim Jones’s People’s Temple, though located in Wales instead of Guyana. It also resembles Rebecca Wait’s The Followers: in both the cult is called the Ark, a reminder to us that Noah was truly the first (and most successful) survivalist. The members of the Ark community refer to all those outside their as the Dead. The leader of the cult, Lucien, chooses mating partners for the girls when they come of age, but some are especially honoured to bear his own progeny, who become a kind of aristocracy within the community. Just what is expected to happen to the human race at the Great Disaster is never specified, whether it’s going to be ecological, military, or even astronomical, is not revealed. We discover early instead that something like the Jonestown massacre overtakes most of the cult. The front story set in 2019 feature three half-siblings who escaped, Romy, Ilo and Eden. The latter two find their way to being fostered by their aunt Sarah in East Anglia, where Romy eventually joins them. Romy is also pregnant by Lucien. Romy carries a knife and is most adept at survival skills, especially dealing with rapists. Ilo and Eden’s schoolmates also learn the consequences of bullying.
The Ark community is well developed in the story. Though “Everybody is No One and No One is Somebody” are the motto of the community, Lucien, his partner Vita, an American though that plays no part of the story, and some of his offspring seem to form an inner circle who actually run things. Community members who run afoul with the leaders have a habit of disappearing or suffering fatal accidents. In either case they are simply not mentioned again. Sarah is the product of a fanatical evangelical Christian church that is virtually a cult itself, whilst the Ark seems to profess some kind of neo-paganism, though I also sensed the suggestion that the Ark existed only to gratify Lucien and his family’s appetite for sex and power.
As I read The Poison Garden with a raging tooth ache, I’m a bit unclear on some of the details and eager to read over parts again. But for now I found the ending a bit enigmatic. It seems the cult may indeed survive, perhaps as they imagine as the only survivors. But whatever the conclusion, this is an engrossing read.