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Brian John

    Brian John crée des récits profondément enracinés dans l'histoire et le paysage, avec un accent particulier sur le Pays de Galles. Son œuvre littéraire explore les liens complexes entre l'expérience humaine et le monde naturel, souvent situés sur des toiles de fond vastes et dramatiques. Par son écriture, il éclaire la relation complexe entre l'humanité et la planète, s'appuyant sur sa vaste expérience en géographie et en sciences. Son style est captivant, invitant les lecteurs à réfléchir sur le monde qui les entoure et leur place en son sein.

    On Angel Mountain
    • On Angel Mountain

      • 328pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,1(64)Évaluer

      This is the first novel in the best-selling 8-volume Angel Mountain Saga, about the life and times of the incorrigible, passionate and very imperfect heroine Martha Morgan. In 1796, Martha becomes the mistress of the struggling Plas Ingli estate, at only eighteen years old. She is pregnant and suicidal. Though she loves her husband David dearly, she is desperately lonely in a strange house, and her quick wit and cutting humour make her as many enemies as friends. There are mysteries surrounding the great fire that devastated the estate but Martha's questions about it remain unanswered. Nobody else seems to realize that their haughty servant Moses Lloyd, the disinherited son of the local squire, is not as trustworthy as the rest of the family would like to think. The local gentry consider that Martha is far too clever for her own good, and indeed it seems inevitable that she will fall into a trap which is designed to send her to the gallows. How can she possibly escape On Angel Mountain is a gripping tale in the tradition of Winston Graham's Poldark. The world which it portrays is very different from that of Jane Austen -- West Wales in the Regency period was a rougher, tougher place, where there was little respect for the law and where status had to be earned, the hard way. The story is written in the form of a diary, in the words of Martha herself.

      On Angel Mountain