Clara's Secret
From the pen of author Robert Wallace and the lens of photographer Adrian Ford comes a book that may well haunt you to the grave. The line between what is real and merely imaginary is blurred and crossed by this collection of weird and wonderful tales set in Bristol.
The four short stories weave in and out of the past and present using well-known locations, local landmarks and documented historical events so skillfully, that the fictional elements are sometimes hard to identify and it is this element that makes these Bristol tales truly unsettling.
Adrian's photographs heighten this sense of unease through their clever manipulation of familiar subjects, add a further dimension to the narratives, and provide an odd, disorientating beauty of their own.
From the pen of author Robert Wallace and the lens of photographer Adrian Ford comes a book that may well haunt you to the grave. The line between what is real and merely imaginary is blurred and crossed by this collection of weird and wonderful tales set in Bristol.
The four short stories weave in and out of the past and present using well-known locations, local landmarks and documented historical events so skillfully, that the fictional elements are sometimes hard to identify and it is this element that makes these Bristol tales truly unsettling.
Adrian's photographs heighten this sense of unease through their clever manipulation of familiar subjects, add a further dimension to the narratives, and provide an odd, disorientating beauty of their own.
From the pen of author Robert Wallace and the lens of photographer Adrian Ford comes a book that may well haunt you to the grave. The line between what is real and merely imaginary is blurred and crossed by this collection of weird and wonderful tales set in Bristol.
The four short stories weave in and out of the past and present using well-known locations, local landmarks and documented historical events so skillfully, that the fictional elements are sometimes hard to identify and it is this element that makes these Bristol tales truly unsettling.
Adrian's photographs heighten this sense of unease through their clever manipulation of familiar subjects, add a further dimension to the narratives, and provide an odd, disorientating beauty of their own.