Quiver: A Novel
by:
Holly Luhning (author)
A masterful debut thriller about the original female Dracula and an underground gothic cult reenacting her ritualized killings in present day London.In sixteenth-century Hungary, Countess Elizabeth Bathory tortured and killed over six hundred servant girls in order to bathe in their blood. She...
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A masterful debut thriller about the original female Dracula and an underground gothic cult reenacting her ritualized killings in present day London.In sixteenth-century Hungary, Countess Elizabeth Bathory tortured and killed over six hundred servant girls in order to bathe in their blood. She believed this practice would keep her skin youthful and her beauty immortal. Quiver tells the story of Danica, a forensic psychologist who works at a former insane asylum-turned-forensic hospital. one of Danica's mental patients is Malcolm Foster, who is imprisoned for murdering a fourteen-year-old girl. Foster is a menacing but fascinating patient and Danica begins to suspect that Foster may have been the head of a gothic cabal idolizing Bathory. Her peers dismiss her discoveries, while disturbing incidents begin following her home from work. Soon after her arrival in London, Danica receives a mysterious note from Maria, a seductive archivist with whom Danica has had an intriguing and complicated past. Maria claims she has Bathory’s diaries that chronicle her relentless torture of young women. As Maria increasingly insinuates herself into Danica’s life, soon Danica is in too deep to notice that Maria’s motivations are far from selfless; in fact, they may just cost Danica her life.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9781605981925 (1605981923)
Publish date: July 15th 2011
Publisher: Pegasus
Pages no: 272
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Paranormal,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
Adult,
Mystery,
Thriller,
Mystery Thriller,
Horror,
Suspense,
Canada,
Vampires
Me: Ah, a loving tribute to female horror tropes. Me: You know, this is very like the early female "vampire" stories. *headtilt* Yuuuup, female vampire tropes with a historical serial killer cult. It was creepy, and atmospheric, and... Ran more on Rule of Drama then Rule of Logic. Stylistically...
It was an excellent take on the similarities between Elizabeth Bathory and a psycho maniac like this. I fairly enjoyed it.