Published by Bullington Press,
8 February 2025.
ISBN: 978-1-73844486-1 (PB)
Gated communities. Upmarket, expensive, exclusive? Or slightly creepy, selective, with a hidden agenda lurking behind a calm façade? Maybe even both?
When Frankie Whittle discovers that the place where she was born has been redeveloped as Pavilion Gardens, a beautiful, gated estate close to where she was brought up in a leafy Manchester suburb, it feels like the answer to her prayers. Frankie is recovering from a miscarriage brought on by a terrifying experience in the London flat she shares with husband Toby. She is keen to get out of London, and wants the support of her mum Nina, who still lives nearby.
Frankie and Toby move into a vacant house in Pavilion Gardens, and are quickly drawn into the community, which consists of young professional couples like themselves, and is overseen by an older couple, Ursula and Fabian. Frankie settles into life at Pavilion Gardens quickly, makes friends and is soon pregnant again, as are several of the other young women.
But things are not as perfect as they seem. Toby is less comfortable; he is ambitious, and it is important to him to be in London for his job, though Frankie can work remotely. Cracks begin to appear in their relationship, and she has already fallen out with her mother, who has been harbouring secrets.
One of the novel’s great strengths is a vivid, almost filmic sense of place. Caroline England clearly knows this area of Manchester very well indeed, and in Pavilion Gardens she has created a tight-knit community in startling visual detail. The neatly manicured lawns; Ursula and Fabian’s museum-like home; the slightly ominous brick edifice looming over the development, now an office block but historically the workhouse: it all contributes to a faint air of menace.
The characters, too, are distinctly in two camps: the well-polished, hospitable residents of Pavilion Gardens on one side, and the far less perfect people on the outside, such as Nina, and Toby’s over-critical mother. And then there’s Jerome, Ursula and Fabian’s son. More secrets lurk there.
The questions keep on coming.
Why did Nina hide the letter that reveals the biggest secret of all? Why do
Ursula and Fabian have so many old photographs of workhouse residents? What
happened to their other son? When the seemingly perfect life of Pavilion
Gardens goes pear-shaped, as inevitably it must or there would be no story, it
happens in the most unexpected way. All the clues are there, but well masked,
and it falls to Frankie to get to the bottom of a dangerous and destructive
situation. It adds up to the kind of novel that will keep you guessing right to
the end.
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick
Caroline England was born in Yorkshire. She studied Law at the University of Manchester and stayed over the border. She writes multi-layered, dark and edgy ‘domestic suspense’ stories that delve into complicated relationships, secrets and the moral grey area. Her debut novel, Beneath the Skin, was published by Avon HarperCollins in October 2017, followed by My Husband's Lies, Betray Her and Truth Games. Under the name CE Rose she has also penned gothic-tinged psychological thrillers The House Of Hidden Secrets and The House On The Water's Edge. Drawing on her days as a divorce and professional indemnity lawyer, she loves to create ordinary, relatable characters who get caught up in extraordinary situations, pressures, dilemmas or crime. She also enjoys performing a literary sleight of hand in her novels and hopefully surprising her readers! Caroline has had stories and poems published in a variety of literary publications and anthologies. Watching Horsepats Feed the Rose, and Hanged By The Neck are her two dark, twisty short story collections. Caroline’s new psychological thriller is The Sinner published in June 2022.
www.carolineenglandauthor.co.uk
Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.