Reviews for The mark of Cain

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Cora, Mimi, and Roger are backback at Bryers Guerdon and in for another dose of mysterious, creeping horror in Barraclough's follow-up to Long Lankin (2012).Four years after the defeat of the centuries-old monster Cain Lankin, Cora and Mimi's dad has finally gotten them their inheritance: Auntie Ida's ramshackle mansion, their ancestral home. He's moved the girls and his girlfriend in before taking off back to what seems to be a life of petty crime. But nearly 400 years earlier, the witch Aphra Rushes cursed the Guerdons, and the return of the girls, the last of the family line, has awakened her malevolent spirit. Barraclough's writing crackles with tension, horror eked out amid dozens of period details vividly evoking rural 1960s England. Cora, now 15, is again the main character, sharing first-person narration with Aphra's spirit (whose back story fills the first 70 pages) and still-stalwart Roger. A true sequel, written for the already initiated, this never truly recaps the first volume but instead builds on it, even acknowledging the way the experience with Cain Lankin changed the children, particularly Mimi and Pete, Roger's nightmare-plagued brother. Convenient adults with stores of mystical knowledge and some inconsistencies of pacing can't detract from the creeping need to stay up all night hoping for a happy end.Literary, scary, and made to read with all the lights on. (Historical fantasy/horror. 12 up) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

After opening with some backstory about a witch from the 1500s, this 1962-set novel centers on Cora and Mimi--last of the Guerdon line. Mimi is acting weird, two mysterious women are following them, and the family house is undeniably cursed. With its lush, moody English landscape and elaborate history, this companion to Long Lankin is equally ambitious and frightening. (c) Copyright 2017. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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