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The Shadow Key

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

"The Shadow Key ushers us into Gothic darkness. . . . What sets this novel above your run-of-the-mill Gothic dread-fest is Stokes-Chapman's skillful deployment . . . and above all, narrator Richard Harrington's masterly performance. A Welshman himself, Harrington has a beautiful, dark brushy voice that alters in pitch to capture men and women and darkens as the perfidy and malevolence unfold. He brings such lyric grace to the occasional Welsh-language passages that they become as haunting and seductive as music." — The Washington Post

On an isolated estate in late-eighteenth-century rural Wales, a young English doctor uncovers dangerous secrets that may threaten his own life in this spellbinding Gothic tale from the bestselling author of Pandora.

Dismissed from his post at a prestigious London hospital, Dr. Henry Talbot has little choice but to accept a mysterious offer of employment as a private physician from an inscrutable lord in rural Wales, Lord Julian. Arriving at Plas Helyg, the isolated estate, Henry can't speak the language and finds himself treated with hostile suspicion by superstitious villagers, whose beliefs in myths and magic he's inclined to dismiss. But when he discovers that his predecessor died under peculiar, inexplicable circumstances, his determination to uncover the truth leads him down a path fraught with danger—made all the more perilous by his headstrong, reluctant ally Linette, Lord Julian's cousin.

Linette has lived a lonely life as Plas Helyg's unconventional mistress: Julian treats her with disdain, her father is long dead, and her mother, long plagued by strange spells and believed by everyone around her to be deeply unwell, spends most of her time locked away in her rooms. Fiercely self-reliant, Linette refuses to wear women's clothes, has no interest in marriage, and takes an interest in the welfare of the men working in Lord Julian's mines, against his wishes.

Linette has always suspected something is not quite right in the village, but it is only through Henry's dogged investigations that the dark truth about those closest to her will come to light—a truth that will bind hers and Henry's destinies together forever in ways neither thought possible.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from March 14, 2025

      Listeners are immersed in 1780s Wales in Stokes-Chapman's suspenseful follow-up to her debut, Pandora. Welsh actor Richard Harrington's rich accent and sublime pacing pair perfectly with Stokes-Chapman's atmospheric writing and gothic setting--the starkly beautiful but vaguely sinister village of Penhelyg. Harrington expertly evokes Dr. Henry Talbot's trepidation as he reluctantly settles in the Welsh countryside as the Tresilian family's private physician after having lost his London surgery post due to an embarrassing scandal. Henry is shocked by the suspicious nature of the villagers, many of whom detest the British landowners, including Henry's employer, Lord Julian Tresilian. While Julian directs Henry to watch his mentally fragile sister-in-law and her daughter, Henry finds the conditions of the mines and villagers' struggles much more problematic. Harrington smoothly manages the shifts in point-of-view as Henry and Linette slowly begin to uncover the true horror behind the gentry's desire to mine deeper into the earth, regardless of the cost to the miners. VERDICT Harrington's spellbinding performance of Stokes-Chapman's gothic novel, which also brilliantly explores issues of class, religion, and science versus. folklore, makes this an excellent choice for historical mystery fans and listeners who appreciate richly drawn characters in lovingly crafted settings. (In her author's note, Stokes-Chapman describes the book as a love letter to Wales.)--Beth Farrell

      Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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