Tangled Web UK Review November 2006
File Updated: 15/06/2007


The Remains of an Altar by Philip Rickman
pbk out September 07 (Quercus) at £6.99

The Malvern Hills, the sudden first rampart between England and Wales, will never look the same to me again as I drive up the M50 and M5. They are the 'ruined altar' of the title, a magical range of hills, like the Preselis of Pembrokeshire. Phil Rickman has done it again, thank God! Weaving a complex, but utterly believable story around a core of local Malvern history and legends, in which to enmesh the Reverend Merrily Watkins, Deliverance Consultant to the Diocese of Hereford. He casts his net widely this time, as he drafts in Sir Edward Elgar – or at least his ghost on a large bicycle– as central pivot of the plot. Then there is Arthur Watkins, a contemporary of Elgar, who both lived in Hereford. Watkins is famed as the protagonist of 'leys', the lines of earth energy which he claimed joined so many ancient sites. Another new character is the local vicar, an ex-SAS soldier turned priest. But it is Merrily, and above all her stroppy daughter Jane who dominates the story – in my opinion, Jane upstages her mother in this book, rounding out into such a compelling character.
A series of night-time road accidents occur in the diffuse, unsociable village of Wychhill, which has a huge 1920's church far too big for it. It was built as a conscience-offering by a quarry owner who repented too late for scarring the rocky heart of the Malverns. It became a temple for the music of Elgar and now has an organist and choirmaster obessed with the musician's memory. Whispers abound that the accidents may have been caused by mysterious balls of light distracting divers – even the possiblity of a wraith-like old gent on a bicycle.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Jane is getting steamed up over plans by a crooked local councillor, replete with brown envelopes, to build 'luxury executive houses' over a ley-line in the village, joining her mother's church with a prominent prehistoric landmark. She gets herself deeper into trouble over this and only Gomer Parry 'Plant Hire' manages to excricate her from deepening trouble.
Phil Rickman has this rare ability to make you believe in the unbelievable and he peoples his stories with characters that defy your efforts to relegate them to the realms of fiction. Though Merrily is always hesitant, diffident and doubtful of her own abilities, when the chips are down, especially if Jane is at risk, she can become a tiger in a dog-collar!
Years ago, the blurbs for the Leslie Charteris thrillers use to say 'the man who has never heard of The Saint, is like the boy who has never heard of Robin Hood'……I think that by now, much the same can be said of Phil Rickman's Merrily Watkins!


( Bernard Knight ex Home Office Pathologist and author of the highly acclaimed Crowner John series)
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