Showing posts with label Andrew Michael Hurley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Michael Hurley. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 June 2025

Barrowbeck

Wyrd Britain reviews 'Barrowbeck' by Andrew Michael Hurley.
Andrew Michael Hurley
John Murray

For centuries, the inhabitants of Barrowbeck, a remote valley on the Yorkshire-Lancashire border, have lived uneasily with forces beyond their reckoning. They raise their families, work the land, and do their best to welcome those who come seeking respite. But there is a darkness that runs through the village as persistently as the river.
As one generation gives way to the next and ancient land is carved up in the name of progress, darkness gathers. The people of Barrowbeck have forgotten that they are but guests in the valley.
Now there is a price to pay. Two thousand years of history is coming to an end.

Originally created as a series of short plays for Radio 4 as 'Voices in the Valley', this reworking of the stories tells, via a series of vignettes, the story of the isolated town of Barrowbeck from pre-history to the near future.

More overtly magical than his previous work but retaining the acute sense of place that characterises his writings, these folk horror miniatures often feel a little thin on the page.  Hurley has made some changes and additions from the scripts but I wish he'd gone deeper as for me they worked better in their original format and needed a deeper, more complex focus to fully satisfy as a book.  That said,  I'm writing from the perspective of someone who thorougly enjoyed the audio plays so perhaps these stories will prove more effective with those who are coming in cold.

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Thursday, 6 June 2024

Starve Acre (trailer)

Starve Acre movie trailer
Today brought the first trailer for the upcoming adaptation of Andrew Michael Hurley's 3rd novel, 'Starve Acre'.

'Dark and sinister forces invade an archaeologist's home as he investigates a mythic folklore about an ancient oak tree on his land.'

Starring Matt Smith and Morfydd Clark and directed by Daniel Kokotajlo, Hurley's folkloric rural horror looks to be in good hands with the trailer offering an intense experience that bodes well for the finished film.


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Tuesday, 19 December 2023

Voices in the Valley (audio drama)

'Barrowbeck, in the north of England, has a reputation for strangeness. It is a place that brings out the sin in people. But despite the dark isolation, people have lived there for centuries until the river got the better of them.'

Andrew Michael Hurley ('The Loney', 'Devil's Day', 'Starve Acre') presents 10 Aickman-esque tales revolving around the Northern English village of Barrowbeck.  Made for the BBC the stories are read by Maxine PeakeReece Shearsmith, Alexandra Hannant, David Schofield, Siobhan Finneran, Paul Hilton, Toby Jones, Tamsin Greig, David Hounslow and Jessica Raine and tell the story of the town and it's troublesome river in stories that touch on science fiction and folk horror and tell of fertility and fairs, divorce and drownings, hibernation and hauntings in perfectly formed - and performed - little vignettes.

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Tuesday, 26 January 2021

Starve Acre

Andrew Michael Hurley
John Murray

The worst thing possible has happened. Richard and Juliette Willoughby’s son, Ewan, has died suddenly at the age of five. Starve Acre, their house by the moors, was to be full of life, but is now a haunted place.
Juliette, convinced Ewan still lives there in some form, seeks the help of the Beacons, a seemingly benevolent group of occultists. Richard, to try and keep the boy out of his mind, has turned his attention to the field opposite the house, where he patiently digs the barren dirt in search of a legendary oak tree.

I wasn't as taken by Hurley's first novel, 'The Loney' (UK / UK), as lots of other people seemed to be but I enjoyed his second, 'Devil's Day' (UK / US), more than others seemed to and with this, his third, I seem to be falling somewhere between the two.

The story of a couple dealing with the sudden death of their troubled young son takes a turn for the weird as the story unfolds.  It's a story that is unremittingly bleak from beginning to end, in fact, increasingly so.

One of the things I didn't like about 'The Loney' was that the - for lack of a better word - 'magic' was so hidden as to be almost an afterthought and as such I thought it felt tacked on whereas in 'Devil's Day' it was beautifully disguised within the story; virtually unnoticed and all the more powerful for it.  In this case it's just too blatant.  The appearance of the hare and Richard's acceptance of such a bizarre occurrence entirely at odds with his reaction to Mrs Forde and the Beacons.

It's a beautifully readable book though. Hurley teases out the story and I found it hard to put the book down, finishing it in two sittings but I have to admit it felt underdeveloped and as such it didn't quite satisfy me to the extent its predecessor did.

Buy it here - UKUS.

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Friday, 28 February 2020

Devil's Day

Devil's Day - Andrew Michael Hurley
Andrew Michael Hurley
John Murray

Every autumn, John Pentecost returns to the Lancashire farm where he grew up to help gather the sheep from the moors. Generally, very little changes in the Briardale Valley, but this year things are different. His grandfather - known to everyone as the Gaffer - has died and John's new wife, Katherine, is accompanying him for the first time.
Every year, the Gaffer would redraw the boundary lines of the village, with pen and paper but also through the remembrance of folk tales, family stories and timeless communal rituals which keep the sheep safe from the Devil. This year, though, the determination of some members of the community to defend those boundary lines has strengthened, and John and Katherine must decide where their loyalties lie, and whether they are prepared to make the sacrifices necessary to join the tribe...
Gripping, unsettling and beautifully written, Andrew Michael Hurley's new novel asks how much we owe to tradition, and how far we will go to belong. 

So, I didn't particularly dig Hurley's debut novel, 'the Loney'.  It took me two attempts to get through it and when I did I found it a little overblown and a tiny bit Dennis Wheatley.  I was interested enough to give this, his second book, a try though and I'm very glad I did.

Devil's Day is a local tradition commemorating a time - 100ish years ago - when the Devil plagued a small farming community. This year prodigal farmers son John is returning to the farm to help out with the gathering of the sheep and his grandfather's funeral and this time, for the first time, he's brought his new wife Kat because he has a plan to return for good and needs to convince her.

With the Devil's Day celebration at its centre you'd expect a supernatural twist to the novel and you won't be disappointed on that front.  In the first novel the magic element was utterly hidden, it happened behind closed doors and all we saw were hints that dead babies were involved.  Here the supernatural elements were altogether more subtle and only made themselves apparent in brief flashes and were all the better for it.

The story at the heart of the book is one about family - in various permutations - and roots and heritage and in that it is pretty successful.  I'm less impressed with the gangster subplot which struck me as clumsy and without the more outre elements I'm unsure as to whether the book would have held my attention but it did and it and in the final examination it was an enjoyable read.

Buy it here - Devil's Day

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Monday, 11 February 2019

The Loney

Andrew Michael Hurley
John Murray / Tartarus Press

"If it had another name, I never knew, but the locals called it the Loney - that strange nowhere between the Wyre and the Lune where Hanny and I went every Easter time with Mummer, Farther, Mr and Mrs Belderboss and Father Wilfred, the parish priest.
It was impossible to truly know the place. It changed with each influx and retreat, and the neap tides would reveal the skeletons of those who thought they could escape its insidious currents. No one ever went near the water. No one apart from us, that is.
I suppose I always knew that what happened there wouldn't stay hidden for ever, no matter how much I wanted it to. No matter how hard I tried to forget...."

I first started reading this a few months back and got about 90 pages in before I realised that I just wasn't into it and shelved it.  I've now had the impulse to finish it and whilst I enjoyed it and there's much to recommend in it's pages I'm not entirely sure I entirely understand what all the fuss was about.

The Loney is a place, a barren, unloved seaside parish where a small group of Catholics base themselves whilst visiting a local shrine in order to pray for the healing of an autistic child.

At the centre of the story is the younger child of a deeply religious mother, 'Mummer', and a pious but more grounded 'Farther' who is very much his brothers keeper; waking him, dressing him, entertaining him and generally being his protector.


The story trips back and forth through time telling an interwoven story set in current time and at two points in the early 1970s.  The main narrative follows the groups final visit to the Loney and the inexplicable events that seemingly trigger a profound change in everyone's circumstances.

Hurley plays with much of the trappings of the gothic novel  and can conjure a good turn of phrase when it comes to describing the bleak landscapes of a wet Easter in Lancashire.  His characters are eccentric and the tale told is mysterious and macabre even at it's conclusion.  I did however find the whole thing occasionally a little flat and a teeny bit frustrating.  I can live without having my books all tied up with a little bow but I do like to have enough clues to speculate upon and here we're provided with some leaden Dennis Wheatley style satanic shenanigans, a touch of folk horror style effigy bothering and a mix of local yokel and gangster villainy that made for confusing bedfellows.  In the end I found myself reading - and mostly enjoying - whilst wishing there had been just a little something more.

Buy it here - The Loney

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