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Banshee
by Hayden Thorne
Category: Erotica/Gay-Lesbian Erotica/Historical Fiction
Description: Nathaniel, or Natty as his family calls him, is a young man at a crossroads. His mother wants him to spend time with her family, far better off than his father, who is a poor vicar. His father would rather he do just about anything else, and his cousins have no interest in getting to know him. So what's a young man with very few prospects to do? When Natty meets Miles Lovell, a sophisticated friend of his cousin, he thinks he's found something worth his while. During their long visit together, Natty discovers things about himself that he never expected, and manages to acquire a ghostly companion, as well. Haunted by a faceless woman, who seems to appear when he's at his weakest, Natty struggles with his own nature, and with his family's increasing difficulties. His mother is distant, hiding things from him as she never has, and his father is growing old and tired before his eyes.
While Natty tries to find his place in the world, his childhood is crumbling around him, and he becomes more and more convinced that his persistent spirit is a harbinger of doom. Caught in a web of deceit and desperation, Natty must decide whether he will let his life be ruled by others, or if he can make his way on his own, or if the family banshee will bring about his ruin.
eBook Publisher: Torquere Press/Prizm Books, 2008 http://www.prizmbooks.com
eBookwise Release Date: January 2009

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Available eBook Formats: OEBFF Format (IMP) [321 KB]
Words: 66482 Reading time: 189-265 min.

I was six when the world shifted. It was 1838, the year of Her Majesty's coronation, a transition that--from all accounts--promised great changes, significant progress, perhaps a new era of prosperity for England. Everyone I knew gave voice to their hopes. Yes, even in a tiny, insignificant village such as Gatcombe, nestled quietly in the rural detachedness of the Isle of Wight, people's expectations--already burdened by past wars and Bonaparte's threat only a few years before--had firmly fixed themselves on the slender, youthful shoulders of a new queen. Lead us to a better place. Give us back our glory. An adolescent monarch leading a new generation--folks in Gatcombe noted it and took great heart. Those of us who could not afford to go to London--that is, all of us--kept our eyes in the direction of the great city. Most drank to the queen's health, and most swore that they could see a million explosions of fire lighting the night skies at the conclusion of that remarkable day. I myself saw nothing, for it was all I could do to peer out of the window of the nursery, and all that met my gaze were shadows and darkness. I'm much older now--nineteen years old, in fact--but I still look back to that year with great fondness and melancholy, for it was also a year that marked a turning-point in my life. The effects might not be felt for several years afterward, but my sixth year of life was the time when my world expanded, and possibilities were suddenly allowed me. Not all of the effects were happy, but I've learned to welcome them--accept them--as an inextricable part of my youth. Yes, even the darker, more frightening turns my adolescence had taken.
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