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Showing posts with label David Towsey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Towsey. Show all posts

Sunday, May 15, 2022

BLOG TOUR - EQUINOX


TITLE - EQUINOX

WRITTEN BY - DAVID TOWSEY 

GENRE - FANTASY/FICTION

PUBLISHED BY - HEAD OF ZEUS/AD ASTRA 

PUBLICATION DATE - AVAILABLE NOW 

A gorgeous monochrome cover with a touch of gold, vividly depicting the contrasting night/day theme of the story, holds a breathtakingly original story about witchcraft, war and magic. In the magical land of Reikova, two souls inhabit each body, each “person” existing only by day or night exclusively; a night-brother has a day-brother, each night-sister, a day-sister, and vice versa.

In the city of Esteberg in the 18th century, Christophor and his day-brother Alexsander are two people in the same body; the former lives at night, the latter by day. Christophor, a Special Inspector, is called to a grisly act of self-mutilation at the local prison in his city of Esteberg and forced to investigate against his wishes. This leads him to the mysterious neighbouring town of Drekenford where untold horrors await him.

In two parts, the first deals with events from Christophor’s point of view and the second from Alexsander’s. (Trigger warning - This latter section begins with a detailed description of the violent death of a horse, following on from the end of the previous part). Alexsander is a totally different person to his night-brother with whom we have spent the majority of the book so far; thanks to Towsey’s excellent characterisation, this shift in perspective adds a whole new dimension to the tale. The position of Special Inspector is very much like a witch-hunter or demonologist, and Christophor has a reputation of being cold and ruthless while Alexsander is a pleasure-loving musician.

The concept of two people sharing the same body is original and quite mind blowing. People chew a drug called “ettiene” to ease the transition between their night and day selves. A small degree of communication is possible between the two selves that doesn’t need to involve the more direct act of leaving notes. This is in fact a clever literary device enabling the narrative to continue outside of Christophor’s point of view when he is “asleep” and Alexsander is “awake”. Also, each separate section of the narrative is illustrated by a small sunrise or crescent moon.



When Christophor finds his investigation hampered by his day-brother, the story becomes as much about Christophor’s war with himself as it does the wider conflict. In fact my first reaction on learning that he would have to travel to another town was to wonder how that would work with Alexsander “in tow”. Proof that the concept is solid and that David Towsey an excellent writer to pull me in to the story like that.

“Equinox” (such a clever title-the time of year when the day and night are of equal length, and in this story of equal importance) can be read as a more magic-y “Name of the Rose”, with a pseudo-policeman on the trail of witchcraft and murder; there is also a library of restricted knowledge where dangerous books have to be kept in the dark. The world has the feel of a particularly dark fairytale; an Eastern European setting hinting at being part of our world but at the same time, subtly different.

The story is sexy, scary and deep with an apocalyptic ending, and the perfectly paced plot hooks you in without you even noticing. Towsey writes vividly and richly, creating a living, breathing world that drips with hidden menace. This is a magical world you will want to lose yourself in - I loved it!

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