Francis Fyfield Omnibus:

Seeking Sanctuary & The Nature of the Beast


 

 

Francis Fyfield Omnibus

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This Omnibus includes Seeking Sanctuary (2005) and The Nature Of The Beast (2001).

Seeking Sanctuary

When Theo Calvert was driven out of the family home by his wife's cloying piety he had determined that his daughters would follow him, but in the face of the law, the girls' health and his wife's intransigence, he failed.  But, if he lost the battle for their souls in life, he would make amends in death, craftily shaping his will to benefit them so long as they did not follow their mother's example.
His daughters felt they had lost either way, especially Anna.  She had promiscuously turned her back on her mother's teachings, but watched in horror as her sister Therese followed those same lessons and naively accepted the faith which Anna was certain had ruined their lives. 
In her rebellion against such blind belief she at first doesn't notice the worm in their midst when the convent where Therese has settled employs a new gardener.  And when she does wake up to the danger she realises she may have left it too late to save their legacy and their lives.

The Nature Of The Beast

Douglas Petty is a man who enjoys his reputation as an unreconstructed male with a penchant for too much wine and too many women.  Inheriting his father's eccentric estate and dog sanctuary quietened him a little, and marriage to Amy a little more.  Even so, it seemed out of character for him a sue a tabloid newspaper for libel when it printed a scurrilous story about him.

His lawyers told him he had a good chance of winning the case, mainly because Amy's testimony would clearly refute the story.  But then Amy is involved in a horrendous train crash and while the authorities assume she died in the resulting fire, there is no body to prove it.   And if she wasn't killed why has she disappeared and, with no money and no other family, where is she?

In a story of mesmerising suspense, Amy slowly reveals why she cannot return to her beloved home, and why she can never escape from the lies she was told as a child.

 

 

“The atmosphere and the writing have a timeless quality…The literary echoes raised are those of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins”
- The Daily Mail

“Fyfield’s writing is always elegant and precise, her characters finely drawn” Sunday Telegraph

“Splendidly atmospheric, strong characters and a twist or two in the telling” Woman and Home

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