Foxglove Summer
This article does not cite any sources. (May 2015) |
Author | Ben Aaronovitch |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Urban Fantasy |
Publisher | Gollancz |
Publication date | 13 November 2014 |
Pages | 384 pp |
ISBN | 978-0575132504 |
Preceded by | Broken Homes (2013) |
Followed by | The Hanging Tree (2016) |
Foxglove Summer is the fifth novel in the Rivers of London series by English author Ben Aaronovitch, published in 2014 by Gollancz.
Plot[]
The protagonist Peter Grant is left shaken by the developments at the end of the previous book, the sudden betrayal and defection by a highly valued colleague to whom Grant also had a strong emotional tie. The moping Grant welcomes the chance to leave the familiar grounds of London and travel to rural Herefordshire, where the disappearance of two eleven-year old girls is a media sensation, the focus of an intensive police search - and might have grave magical implications as well.
Grant finds that the tangle of marital and extra-marital relations in a small rural community is not only a matter for gossip, but bears very serious criminal implications, and some supernatural ones as well. He meets with a retired wizard, traumatized by the secret magical battles of World War II, and with the wizard's granddaughter who has a very special affinity with bees. Grant gets into intensive contact with Beverley Brook, the goddess or Genius loci of Beverley Brook, a tributary of the Thames - and learns by personal experience just how rivers gain such gods. He finds that unicorns are all too real and that their horns are deadly weapons; that fairies do exist and even in the 21st century they do sometimes kidnap human children and replace them with changelings; and he meets with a real-life faerie queen, very different from the one imagined by Spenser.
As the ultimate result of all that, Grant faces the prospect of being stuck forever as a captive in the real-life fairyland - an alternative reality or Otherworld where Britain is still covered with a massive unbroken primeval forest, with no sign of the familiar towns and villages. Grant's single, slender hope of escape lies in the lasting magical (or possibly anti-magical) effect of the Roman Empire's engineering projects and of the Romans' habit of imposing themselves on the landscape and building "roads straight as an arrow" wherever they ruled.
Characters[]
Returning characters[]
- Police Constable Peter Grant; an officer in the Metropolitan Police and the first official apprentice wizard in sixty years.
- Lesley May; formerly Police Constable in the Metropolitan Police and de facto apprentice to Nightingale; now criminal associate of the faceless man and subject to an internal investigation
- Detective Chief Inspector Thomas Nightingale; head of the Folly and the last officially sanctioned English Wizard.
- Molly; The Folly's domestic helper, of unknown species.
- Dr Abdul Haqq Walid; world-renowned gastroenterologist and cryptopathologist.
- Beverley Brook; goddess of a small suburban river and consulting ecologist.
Characters Introduced in this Novel[]
- Detective Constable Dominic Croft; a member of the West Mercia Major Crimes Unit assigned as Peter's liaison.
- 2014 British novels
- Novels by Ben Aaronovitch
- Fantasy novels
- Novels set in Herefordshire
- Victor Gollancz Ltd books
- 2010s fantasy novel stubs