Tap cover to enlarge

The Moor Is Dark Beneath the Moon

Published
Nov 2002
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
176

About This Book

Advance Praise from Carol Shields, author of Unless and The Stone Diaries I read The Moor Is Dark Beneath the Moon with great pleasure and with a particular appreciation for its narrative energy; one wants to go on turning over those pages. I loved the Cornish stuff and felt affection for the kids, the teenagers—well, more than affection, more like an instant recognition. — Carol Shields After decades in Canada, Davey Bryant returns to Cornwall, England, for the funeral of a mysterious relative and lands in the middle of a property-inheritance squabble that threatens to escalate into something far worse. Distraught by the changed landscape of his beloved homeland, Davey wanders the lonely moors and is soon sleuthing his way through a farce of megalithic proportions in which a midget couple driving a Morris Mini van might or might not be reincarnations of an evil Camelot dwarf and his consort. In the course of his investigations, Davey becomes ever more dislocated in time as he tries to fathom the nature of a gay family tree that besides himself may include a spinster aunt and a good-looking teenage cousin named Quentin. Magic's in the air, and it's not just the glint of the BBC cameras shooting a mini-series about Merlin and King Arthur in Tintagel. As Davey says about the moors, Lots of things have died out here. And not just bodies, but hopes and strange loves. Nothing is really quite as it seems.

Genres & Themes

Subgenres

Characters & Occupations

Buy This Book

Formats & Editions

Browse the different covers, formats, and publication history for this title.

Paperback

Paperback edition cover
Trade Paperback
Nov 2002 Porcepic Books ISBN13 9780888784346 ISBN10 0888784341
Buy

eBook

eBook edition cover
eBook
Nov 2002 Dundurn Press ISBN13 9781554886548 ISBN10 1554886546
Buy
eBook edition cover
eBook
Nov 2002 Dundurn ISBN10 B004322H6Q
Buy