Tangled Web UK Review November 2005
File Updated: 12/05/2006

Buy at Amazon Price The Smile of a Ghost The Smile of a Ghost by Philip Rickman
pbk out June 06 (Pan) at £6.99

After his last couple of books, I was already beginning to think that Phil Rickman is the best writer of dialogue in the business and his new 'Merrily Watkins' confirms this impression. With his utterly convincing descriptions of people and places in the Welsh Marches, the reality is such that I find it hard to believe that this is fiction. With previous books, I pored over large-scale maps to follow the action and in this new one, I went on the Net to study Ludlow and its castle, which is the main focus of 'The Smile.'
Merrily, a young vicar who is the exorcist or 'Deliverance Consultant' for the diocese of Hereford, is in danger of being ousted by antagonistic elements within the Church, who foist a supercilious female canon and a smarmy retired psychiatrist on her, intent on making her redundant. This coincides with the unexplained death of a young boy who falls from a tower in Ludlow's spectacular castle. His uncle, a recently-retired detective, is suspicious and when another girl crashes to her death, a well-known castle ghost story is revived, a true tale of a 12th century when a betrayed maiden leaps from one of the towers after slaying her lover. Even the bishop confesses to Merrily that, when a curate in Ludlow, he lost a bet over staying in that tower at night, due to his fear of dark forces.
A new factor is a strange former Gothic pop-star, Belladonna, who parades the town at night in weird clothing, carrying a candle and looking forward to being dead. Lots of side plots impinge on the central story, which reveals sinister Internet chat-rooms that encourage youngsters to kill themselves. All the usual characters are there, such as Jane, Merrily's highly-independent daughter, and Lol, the diffident musician and former psychiatric patient who is now almost Merrily's partner. I was afraid that my favourite figure, Gomer Parry, the JCB driver, would be missing, but thankfully he makes an albeit-brief appearance on p.275 !
Phil Rickman writes books which are big as well as excellent, yet the reader gobbles up the pages in no time, desperate to know how it turns out. As always, he makes the story walk the shaky tightrope between the supernatural and reality, keeping it sane enough to ensure one's belief, yet surreptitiously nudging the most sceptical reader into considering the unthinkable.
The Merrily Watkins books are easily amongst the most interesting being written in Britain today and I cannot understand why they not yet been snapped up for a television series.


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

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