The Clairvoyants: A Novel

The Clairvoyants: A Novel

by Karen Brown

Narrated by Megan Tusing

Unabridged — 11 hours, 13 minutes

The Clairvoyants: A Novel

The Clairvoyants: A Novel

by Karen Brown

Narrated by Megan Tusing

Unabridged — 11 hours, 13 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$18.55
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)
$19.95 Save 7% Current price is $18.55, Original price is $19.95. You Save 7%.

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers


Overview

Karen Brown's most hypnotic novel to date is gothic-inflected psychological suspense that unmasks the secret desires of a young woman with a mystical gift.

On the family homestead by the sea where she grew up, Martha Mary saw ghosts. As a young woman, she hopes to distance herself from those spirits by escaping to an inland college town. There she is absorbed by a budding romance, relieved by separation from an unstable sister, and disinterested in the flyers seeking information about a young woman who has disappeared-until one Indian summer afternoon when the missing woman appears beneath Martha's apartment window, wearing a winter coat, her hair coated with ice.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

11/28/2016
In Brown’s gripping second novel (after 2013’s The Longings of Wayward Girls), narrator Martha can see the dead, though she doesn’t feel obligated to help them. But she’s intrigued when she begins to see the ghost of Mary Rae Swindal, a girl reported missing in Martha’s upstate New York college town. Mary Rae’s ghost leads Martha to a house where she meets William Bell, a fellow photographer. Martha and William have a whirlwind courtship that ends in their marrying on the day of Mary Rae’s funeral. Martha’s unstable sister, Del, with whom Martha shares a dark childhood secret, follows Martha to Ithaca after spending three years in a psychiatric institution. Through William, the sisters end up spending time with his mentor, Anne, and a mourning group of girls from Mary Rae’s nearby hometown, Milton. William’s behavior becomes increasingly worrisome as Martha starts to see visions of him in the place where Mary Rae died; Martha and Del begin to wonder if he might be dangerous. Martha’s faith in Del is also challenged, though another traumatic event forces them to rely on each other. Brown’s novel is a riveting page-turner. She deftly reveals bits of Martha’s and Del’s past in tandem with more details about the mystery that Martha is trying to unravel, leaving the reader wondering if Martha might be an unreliable narrator. Though the ending isn’t entirely satisfying, Brown shows an admirable ability to create suspense. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

"Brown takes her time drawing readers into the perspective of Martha Mary, a character who makes for the best kind of unreliable narrator . . . . A suspensefully ambiguous story, one where the twists aren’t so much shocking as harrowing confirmations of what the story’s been trying to say against our narrator’s will the whole time."
Romantic Times Book Review

"A complex, chilling ghost story. . . Compelling . . . Brown paces the plot deliberately, building dread in both the present and past time lines as she switches between them . . . A thrilling read."
Tampa Bay Times

“A master of intrigue, Brown has crafted a haunting mystery that will . . . push readers until the very end.”
Booklist (starred review)

“Weaves a complex narrative with a lyrical thread of memoires; [An] arresting, unsettling, and beautiful tale. Brown enchants and haunts by making the reader question every voice, every truth.”
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“Gripping . . . . Brown’s novel is a riveting page-turner.”
Publishers Weekly

“Karen Brown deftly manages to make the occult ordinary and the strange familiar in this surprising and suspenseful novel.”
Lily Tuck, National Book Award-winning author of The News from Paraguay

“Karen Brown draws us effortlessly into the mysterious world of The Clairvoyants, where the line between the dead and the living falls away. An enchanting novel that will keep you turning pages!”
Wendy Walker, bestselling author of All Is Not Forgotten

“Karen Brown's The Clairvoyants is an eerie and affecting dose of Gothic fiction. Martha Mary would've been right at home in a Shirley Jackson novel. Martha sees ghosts, and by the end of the twisting, quietly unnerving story, you will swear you do too.”
Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts and Disappearance at Devil's Rock

“With an insightful and poetic voice, Karen Brown creates a mystical world filled with suspense, desire and lastly acceptance. Her sophomore novel, The Clairvoyants, simmers from beginning to end and will leave readers wondering if ghosts might be lingering just outside the door.”
Lori Roy, Edgar Award-winning author of Bent Road and Until She Comes Home

The Clairvoyants is a deliciously modern classic ghost story, full of snowstorms and sly sisters and sorrowful, dangerous parties. Karen Brown has created a world in which the dead are as real as the living and the living cannot be trusted. I was haunted by my visit there and, like the ghosts that populate this taut and magnetic novel, I didn’t want to leave.”
Chloe Benjamin, New York Times bestselling author of The Immortalists

The Clairvoyants is a beautiful, spookily atmospheric, ridiculously accomplished novel. Karen Brown’s writing is so rich with detail, eroticism, and psychological insight that I really would read anything with her name on it—grocery list, instruction manual, casserole recipe, brilliant new novel.”
Christine Sneed, author of Paris, He Said

Library Journal

09/15/2016
Mary Martha has been able to see spirits since she was young, but she has never used her gift to help others and usually ignores her special abilities. When she escapes her monotonous life on the seaside family homestead for an inland college town, she notices a flyer seeking information about a missing young woman, whose apparition then appears to her. Becoming increasingly obsessed with this specter, Mary begins a romance with Billy, who seems to have a suspicious history with the vanished girl. The arrival of sister Del, who manages to assimilate herself into Mary's group and life, makes this story all the more convoluted. While the author's premise—two very different siblings, an absent father, a promiscuous mother, teen years blemished by a murder, and a missing woman—holds promise, Brown has failed to flesh out her characters enough for readers to really care about any of them. The abrupt denouement will leave readers wanting more. VERDICT Brown's second novel (after The Longings of Wayward Girls) is a creepy gothic tale that in the end disappoints. Still, fans of her first book and award-winning short story collections (Little Sinners and Other Stories; Pins and Needles) may be curious. [See Prepub Alert, 8/26/16.]—Marianne Fitzgerald, Severna Park H.S., MD

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2016-10-05
A young woman who sees ghosts leaves home only to lose herself to love.Martha has agreed to attend college partly to relieve her mother of the burden of worrying about her, but she finds excitement in the independence as well. All too soon, however, she must deal with two unexpected visitors: the ghost of a young woman who has recently gone missing and her all-too-alive younger sister, Del. Del, the golden child, the unstable one, the one who had been institutionalized at 16 in response to her abuse of drugs, alcohol, and sex, presents a foil to Martha, who is still a virgin at 20. Still, it's Martha who is drawn almost immediately to William, a professor at the college and erstwhile lover of the ghost girl, Mary Rae. Martha finds power in the passion that flares between them, but she also becomes part of a strange social group composed of her landlord, a dying artist/professor, and a group of girls who grew up with Mary Rae and all may or may not have posed for William’s photographic study of women sleeping in the nude. During the parties they attend in the atmospheric Connecticut fall and winter, Martha must try to figure out why Del has come to join her as well as whether she can trust William. And in the background, there's always the ghost. Brown weaves a complex narrative with a lyrical thread of memories; Martha grew up near a camp of spiritualists, so the supernatural has always seemed part of her world. The mystery of a local boy found dead the summer that Martha was 15 is another undercurrent of Brown's (The Longings of Wayward Girls, 2013, etc.) arresting, unsettling, and beautiful tale. Brown enchants and haunts by making the reader question every voice, every truth.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169779950
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 02/07/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews