Ratings4
Average rating3.9
'Deliciously chilly' - Guardian 'Humming with suppressed hysteria and madness' - The Times 'Wonderfully evocative' - Heat Hare House is not its real name, of course. I have, if you will forgive me, kept names to a minimum here, for reasons that will become understandable . . . In the first brisk days of autumn, a woman arrives in Scotland having left her job at an all-girls school in London in mysterious circumstances. Moving into a cottage on the remote estate of Hare House, she begins to explore her new home. But among the tiny roads, wild moorland, and scattered houses, something more sinister lurks: local tales of witchcraft, clay figures and young men sent mad. Striking up a friendship with her landlord, Grant, and his younger sister, Cass, she begins to suspect that all might not be quite as it seems at Hare House. And as autumn turns to winter, and a heavy snowfall traps the inhabitants of the estate within its walls, tensions rise to fever pitch. Sally Hinchcliffe’s Hare House is a modern-day witch story, perfect for fans of Pine and The Loney. 'A beautiful, slow burn of a novel, eerie and shimmering in equal measure' - Mary Paulson-Ellis
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved the brooding sinister atmosphere in this book and the fact that everything is left so ambiguous, leaving the reader guessing at every turn. The writing is beautiful, the author really captures a sense of place and builds the air of supernatural with the weird neighbours, strange history and the hare motif running through the novel. This would make a fantastic book club read, as you never quite know what will happen or how reliable the narrator is being.
This novel is as if Starve Acre (2019) and Pine (2020) fell in love and had a chillingly fascination child.