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Idle Grounds

Win a free print copy of this book!

1 day and 03:33:55

20 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book
The following is an account of an afternoon in June in which we sallied forth and then for the most part back.

By we I mean the cousins who were a varied crew with the normal range of grubby characteristics and while we weren’t great, I’d like your sympathy because of our humanity and also what we’ve lost.

Kindle Edition

Expected publication February 11, 2025

About the author

Krystelle Bamford

2 books10 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Lewis Cain.
273 reviews19 followers
September 7, 2024
In short this one is strange, weird and tense. It’s the story of a group of cousins at a party who go in search of something they’ve seen in the woods, and one of the group who goes of one their own. I actually really enjoyed it, you never quite know what’s going on, just that something dark and strange is lurking and has the power to make everything go wrong. It’s quirky and funny, and written in a way that takes you along for the ride. It’s a nice short one and completely different which makes it all the more enjoyable.
Profile Image for Mark.
924 reviews5 followers
August 19, 2024
The plot of ‘Idle Grounds’ is tricky to summarise as it’s not obvious what’s going on. The novel is set during a family party on a Summer’s afternoon when the parents are preoccupied with one another and the unsupervised cousins play outside in a ramshackle large garden. The narrator is now an adult looking back at this pivotal childhood event and also speculating about how their grandmother Beezy met her end before she was born. She’s inclined to let her attention wander resulting in several ‘intermission’ chapters that break up the narrative. The reader gets the impression from her unusual turns of phrase that the narrator is trying a bit too hard to seem literary and that adds a layer of humour to the account.
I was simultaneously intrigued and bemused by this strange book - it helps that it’s not very long. It reminded me of those songs about childhood from the psychedelic era that convey menace as well as nostalgia. A very real sense of threat is lurking even though we don’t know what it actually is!
Profile Image for Joseph.
515 reviews144 followers
August 16, 2024
The main storyline in this debut novel by poet Krystelle Bamford is set over one hot June day, in the 80s, in rural New England. A group of young cousins have gathered, with their respective families, for a birthday party at the house of their unmarried aunt Frankie. Left to their own devices, the children explore the house and, from the window of an upstairs bathroom, spot something eerie and undefined, prowling in the grounds of the property. Three-year-old Abi runs down and promptly disappears. For the rest of the day, the children, led by eldest cousin – twelve-year old Travis – explore the house and its surroundings, looking for Abi but, by the end of the day, discovering more than they bargained for.

This type of novel – in which a now-adult narrator looks back to a defining event in childhood/youth – has become a genre in itself. It takes an original writer to make such a story stand out, and Bamford fits the bill.

What, I felt, makes this slim novel memorable is the idiosyncratic voice of the unnamed narrator. It combines within it the wide-eyed wonder of the child who experienced the day’s events, and the more-knowing style of an adult who, perhaps, is trying too hard to sound like a “literary author”. The result is a narration which is at times eerie and unsettling, surrounded by a magical aura (we never learn what exactly the children were seeing from the bathroom window – probably a figment of their fertile imagination) and, at others, darkly humorous in an offbeat way. The narrator, for instance, has a knack for convoluted metaphors and irrelevant digressions, but then surprises us with passages of poetic intensity.

Bamford also keeps a tight control over the plot. As the day unfolds and things come to a head, there are several flashbacks and flashforwards which allow the readers to slowly piece together the dark history of this eccentric family, dominated by the matriarchal figure of Grandma “Beezy” and her mysterious demise. Thus the novel achieves a double-climax – one happens on the day of the main storyline, but it coincides with our discovery of what actually happened to Beezy. It’s all very clever and well-crafted, turning a now-common trope into a memorable debut.

4.5*

https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/20...
Profile Image for Klara-May.
Author 1 book5 followers
September 23, 2024
this book is so strange and yet i had to keep reading to find out where on earth it was going to end up, the hallmark of a good book right?
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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