Rotherweird: Rotherweird Book I

· Rotherweird Book 1 · Hachette UK
3.7
17 reviews
Ebook
464
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

'A book with special and dangerous properties' Hilary Mantel, bestselling author of Wolf Hall

'Enthralling' M.R. Carey, bestselling author of The Girl With All the Gifts

'An imaginative tour de force' The Times

1558: Twelve children, gifted far beyond their years, are banished by their Tudor queen to the town of Rotherweird. Some say they are the golden generation; some say the devil's spawn. But everyone knows they are something to be revered - and feared.

Four and a half centuries on, cast adrift from the rest of England by Elizabeth I and still bound by its ancient laws, Rotherweird's independence is subject to one disturbing condition: nobody, but nobody, studies the town or its history.

Then an Outsider arrives, a man of unparallelled wealth and power, enough to buy the whole of Rotherweird - deeply buried secrets and all . . .

Welcome to Rotherweird.

'A remarkable achievement' Sunday Independent

'Compelling' Guardian

Ratings and reviews

3.7
17 reviews
Midge Odonnell
November 26, 2020
Oh dear, this book was a really hard slog. It started off well enough with a brief history of how during Elizabeth 1st reign the Island of Rotherweird was selected to house these specially gifted children away from her sight as she had decreed they should be killed. "Modern Day" Rotherweird is still existing and operating in the same way it did when it was set up but with some anachronistic technology. Vaguely Steampunk but without a definite structure to how the society operates and what technology they have developed independantly from the rest of the world. To be honest I think this is where the book lost me initially, a real lack of world building. I am still really annoyed with this book. The blurb sounded so good and so the sort of thing I love that how dire it actually read still makes me mad. Even after finishing it I have no clear idea of the actual world this is set in, everything is just glazed over and nothing is described properly. There is an attempt with the Town Record Keeper to give some cultural insight but that is about it. Another thing that really bothered me was the almost cartoon villain that is introduced early on. I won't go in to much detail as then we step in to spoiler territory. Honestly he felt like the Hooded Claw from the old Penelope Pitstop cartoons from the 1970s. The magic that is introduced seems to change how it operates depending on what the author has suddenly decided he needs it to do. Generally an infuriating read. This review has been a long time coming. I actually read this book between the 1st and 13th May 2020 so my memory is a bit foggy about all the plot lines. Fortunately, I have a notebook where I jot some initial thoughts on the book and an overall ranking so between the book blurb and that I did have a reasonable handle on what I thought at the time of reading. I originally had this as a 2 Star in my notebook. However, when thinking about it to write this belated review I got so angry about what a missed opportunity this book was that I revised it down to just one star. So extremely pleased that I only purchased book one instead of buying the full set.
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David Ferguson
October 14, 2017
I got this at a very good price, which definitely made it worth while. Not sure I would have thought the same if I paid full price.
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About the author

Andrew Caldecott is a KC, an occasional playwright and author of the bestselling Rotherweird trilogy, Rotherweird, Wyntertide and Lost Acre. Simul, the sequel to Momenticon, will publish in 2024.

Sasha Laika studied figurative art in Moscow, followed by a degree in Graphic Design and Illustration in the UK. A London-based artist for the last 10 years, Sasha creates highly intricate works that draw on imagery from mythology, folklore and religious iconography. Her works are inhabited by mystical creatures that morph between human and animal, and exist in transition somewhere between the worlds of fantasy and reality. She considers Rotherweird the perfect subject for her début work as a book illustrator.

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