Synopses & Reviews
Mary Stewart, author of many bestselling novels, has been often compared with the Brontë sisters. Her 1960 classic
My Brother Michael, with its superb mingling of romance and suspense, its vivid descriptions and overtone of impending disaster, is further evidence that the comparison is richly deserved.
Perhaps Camilla Haven unintentionally invoked the gods that afternoon in the crowded Athens café when she wrote to a friend, Nothing ever happens to me.” But a few hours later, an extraordinary train of events had dispatched Camilla to Delphi, to be in the company of a charming but quietly determined Englishman named Simon Lester. Simon told Camilla he had come to the ancient Greek ruins to appease the shade” of his brother Michael, killed some fourteen years earlier on Parnassus. From a curious letter Michael had written, Simon believed his brother had stumbled upon something of great importance hidden in the craggy reaches of the mountainside.
And then Simon and Camilla learned that they were not alone in their search...
Review
"Stewart's deft writing and plotting put her among the best of the adventure-suspense-romance novelists." Library Journal
Review
"A fast-moving suspense novel set against the background of Delphi, which affords the reader even more hair-raising nightmarish adventures than in earlier novels." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"This detective adventure...is seen through the eyes of a characteristic Stewart heroine; and surely there are few more attractive young women in today's popular fiction." New York Times
Review
"Mary Stewart's best novel to date....The villains are wonderfully ruthless, the people major and minor are alive and picturesque, and the treasure-hunt theme has perhaps never had such an awesome and uplifting object." San Francisco Chronicle
Synopsis
First published in 1960, this classic novel, with its superb mingling of romance and suspense and its vivid and foreboding descriptions, chronicles Camilla Haven's adventure to Delphi in the company of a charming but quietly determined Englishman named Simon Lester. Camilla begins to investigate the craggy ruins of the mountainside with Simon, who believes his brother Michael stumbled upon something of great importance before he was murdered. Soon, however, Simon and Camilla learn that they are not alone in their search and that Michael's death is still remembered by others in whom brooding passion and unresolved conflict still rage. Endlessly evocative prose pairs with a relentless pace in this stirring novel that leads to a last terrifying moment on the slopes of Parnassus where, high above the majestic serenity of Delphi, love and hatred meet in a climactic conclusion.
About the Author
Mary Stewart is the author of 20 novels, including the Merlin trilogy, The Ivy Tree, Nine Coaches Waiting, and Thornyhold.