Reviews

Friends of the Dusk by Phil Rickman

zoefruitcake's review against another edition

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5.0

Every time I read a Phil Rickman I am torn between reading it as fast as I can to find out what's going on, and as slowly as I can to savour the experience. Having been a fan for over 20 years I'm going to enjoy it but this one is outstanding.

divapitbull's review against another edition

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4.0

Review contains minor spoilers.

Friends of the Dusk is classic Merrily Watkins and a very enjoyable addition to the series. This time around Rickman takes on the vampire myth – Herefordshire style. So not a “classic” vampire exactly; more of a “peradventure the Lord has given power to the evil angel of the lost soul to move about in the dead corpse” sort of vampire. A possession of sorts. Perfect job for the local Deliverance Minister. Except of course nothing is ever straight forward in Merrily’s world.

It starts when Rajab Ali Khan - of the West Midlands cocaine chain fame - asks her to deal with the poltergeists in his cousin Adam Malik’s home. The ancient farmhouse was bought by Adam and his in-laws and is being lovingly restored by his father in law. The property was purchased from the scholar Selwyn Kindley -Price and seems to have come with a bit of baggage and a salacious history. It seems Selwyn connected a medieval vampire tale to the valley in which his farmhouse/castle sits and started churning out pre-Twilight era books aimed at the teen/tween set with the end goal of having as much sex as possible with very young girls. Seems like old lecherous Selwyn invited something nasty in and a Major E might be called for. Too bad Merrily can’t follow protocol and go to her Bishop. Poor old Bernie Dunmore’s had a stroke and his replacement Craig Innes is what Huw Owen unaffectionately refers to as “a cunt” so you know that can’t be good. Innes wants to do away with the Night Job and send it back where it belongs – to the psychiatrists – and so wants to oust Merrily in the process.

As if this isn’t all bad enough a hurricane has taken down an ancient tree at a historical site and it looks like we have a deviant burial – head chopped off and between the knees with a stone in it’s mouth to prevent Selwyn’s original evil angel from coming back. Enter Frannie Bliss because some people feel that ancient skull is worth killing for – brutally – and once again Bliss and Merrily’s paths cross as the mundane intersects with the metaphysical.
In this installment both Lol and Jane are home and do their part to support Merrily.

What I really liked:
-Anthea White batting for the side of light for her little clergyperson and condescending that perhaps a blessing would not cause offense.
-Sophie’s quiet yet respectably devious rebellion and loyalty to Merrily.
-Huw Owen’s very resourceful handling of Bishop Innes – what with all the falling on steps and falling into doors, phones getting nicked and Bishops with anger management problems getting blackmailed.
-Frannie and Annie

What I didn’t like:
-Jane’s coming of age crisis. Classic Rickman – leave the breadcrumbs and let you fill in the blanks. The way it was built up – with the apparent angst and turmoil and secrecy – my blanks pointed towards roofied gang rape on sacred ground. Actual blanks pointed towards….seriously, *that’s* your crisis? Underwhelming.
-Bliss’s visit to Charlie Howe. Once again…did he even know WHY he was going? Was there really something significant he hoped to accomplish or is he simply a masochist?
-The fact that Rickman is much smarter than me because I still feel like I need the ending spelled out…the connection between Selwyn and his Maleficus and his son’s behavior….contamination by approximation? Bad genetics? Aisha’s involvement – is she like Lucy Westenra – one of the possessed Brides of Dracula? And what exactly was she doing wandering around looking like a mature lady who’s been around the block? Or more specifically - *Who* was she doing?

What I can’t wait for (hurry up with the next book already)
-The shit-storm that accompanies the outing of Frannie and Annie (hope they make it)
-Craig Innes’s reaction to having his clock cleaned by Huw and having to suffer the ongoing presence of a Deliverance Minister.

What I hope for:
-Charlie Howe going down for all the dirt
-Lol and Merrily making it official
-Frannie and Annie making it official – unless that means they can’t keep working together; in which case making it a well known secret.










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deborahmaryrose's review against another edition

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5.0

I found this the best book ever! Interesting plot, parallel investigations which don’t meet up until the end. The usual humour and stealthy horror, lovely descriptions of the towns and villages, along with the same old, and now beloved characters continuing their lives in the English borderlands. I’m sad that I’m now beginning the last book and will have to wait until fall 2021 for the most recent book to be published. There are few series which I have loved as much as this one. It has inspired me to visit that part of England when this cursed Pandemic has run its course.

bgg616's review against another edition

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4.0

Merrily continues to annoy her superiors. There's a new bishop in charge and he doesn't believe in the deliverance (exocism) practice. Merrily's love life isn't closer to being sorted, and her daughter is having challenges in her own love life, and figuring out her career.
Merrily is asked to intervene for a family living in an old house with a mysterious past. The current occupants are a Muslim family and their non-Muslim in-laws. There seems to be a powerful and negative presence in the house.
The house and its surroundings are tied to a centuries-old story of an evil figure. There used to be a village and a castle. The village has all but disappeared and the castle is in ruins. Merrily and her fellow exorcist, the Welsh vicar, Huw, are in pursuit of the history, while Merrily avoids her bishop who wants to get rid of her.

Another decent chapter in the Merrily Watkins series.

ciannait76's review against another edition

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5.0

4.5 rounded up to 5 All the elements of a good Merrily Watkins series book with one tiny annoyance...the supernatural part was resolved so fast and without the usual oumph! otherwise the whole book was gripping.

trees11's review against another edition

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2.0

too many sub plots, little character development, complicated yet boring plot.

Feel like author is paid by the word so is getting the money's worth.

skonyo's review against another edition

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4.0

4.2 - Vampires , faeries , djins and one Merrily watkins - what a treat.

judenoseinabook's review against another edition

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3.0

Seemed to take a while to get going. But once it did good story.Why did the new bishop behave that way? Not really explained.

kizzia's review

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challenging dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

annebrittingoleson's review

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5.0

I think this might just be my favorite Merrily book.

So far.