4,49 €
4,49 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
payback
0 °P sammeln
4,49 €
4,49 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar

Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
payback
0 °P sammeln
Als Download kaufen
4,49 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
payback
0 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
4,49 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar

Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
payback
0 °P sammeln
  • Format: ePub

Worse things than dying: A Fr John Winter novel
If you had the power, would you kill your present child to create a better, healthier one?
If you had the power, would you help an old friend and a tortured young man, even at the risk of destroying your own health?
If you had the power, would you take a loved one from their resting place in the grave, if there was a chance you could breathe new life into them?
Where would you stop? How far would you go?
'Worse things than dying a Fr John Winter novel,' follows a retired priest, a high-powered cardinal, a demented scientist, a
…mehr

  • Geräte: eReader
  • mit Kopierschutz
  • eBook Hilfe
  • Größe: 0.51MB
  • FamilySharing(5)
Produktbeschreibung
Worse things than dying: A Fr John Winter novel
If you had the power, would you kill your present child to create a better, healthier one?
If you had the power, would you help an old friend and a tortured young man, even at the risk of destroying your own health?
If you had the power, would you take a loved one from their resting place in the grave, if there was a chance you could breathe new life into them?
Where would you stop? How far would you go?
'Worse things than dying a Fr John Winter novel,' follows a retired priest, a high-powered cardinal, a demented scientist, a tormented businessman and two disabled lovers who have found love with each other, as they confront these issues and struggle with the most basic of all questions, what does 'human' mean anymore?

Bleakmount Parish, Mid-Roscommon 1854-1880; and Athlone and Philadelphia and Virginia, 1984 Ireland.
Living under the shadow of his famous uncle, now a cardinal in Philadelphia, forty-eight-year-old Fr John Winter, by contrast, is burnt out. A failed Catholic priest back living in Athlone where his career started in the 1960s. Now it is 1984. He is older, disillusioned, and utterly exhausted. He spends his evenings in the Royal Hoey hotel in the centre of town, propping up the bar, drinking pints of stout and whiskey chasers. It is December, the days are gloomy and short, it is coming near Christmas. Three months previously, Winter returned from his last posting in Adamsdown and Splott, a working-class area of South Glamorgan in Cardiff down on its luck, blighted by unemployment. His last deed there was to use his psychic gift to help unearth a murder in the basement of an old house on Comet Street that took place several decades earlier. But this very gift is what has exhausted him. He wants no more of, as one person described him, being an occult bloodhound.
Now living in the quiet cul-de-sac of Maple Lane in the town's West Bank, with his loyal housekeeper Mary McLaughlin, who knew him before he left for several postings abroad over twenty years ago, things do not get easier.
They get much more complicated in fact.
His uncle has written to him from Philadelphia. The letter begins, 'John, if you're reading this, I might be missing, or dead.' Winter knows that his uncle runs a secret organisation in the US, determined to stop advances in human eugenics, or genetic engineering, led by one man: rabid eugenicist Dr Eugene Marks.
Through Philip Franks, an old friend of his, Winter meets Samantha Clarke. Franks is an accountant; a cautious man. He knows all the good Winter achieved before leaving Athlone all those years ago as a young, energetic gifted priest. Franks hates to see him descend into the arms of drink. Soon after being introduced to her by Franks, Winter begins a romantic relationship with a thirty-seven-year-old widow. They soon become lovers.
Winter's plan to live a quiet life is further shaken when he receives a letter from an old friend. The friend is Fr Michael Gallagher, formerly a high-flying priest in Birmingham. But Gallagher got into trouble when he had an affair with the wife of one of his major benefactors, a millionaire building contractor. For his penanceand his safetyGallagher is banished to Bleakmount, a poor, isolated parish in Mid-Roscommon. A place whose inhabitants DNA is still traumatized by the memory of the misery and terror of the famine years and the subsequent land war era.
Gallagher has witnessed Winter use his psychic gift and wants him to use it again to help a parishioner of his. Bankrupt hotelier Ted Ward has moved with his wife Lillian and son David into an old famine cottage on a poor plot of land that he bought years earlier to keep a few horses on. He never envisioned that he would someday have to call it home. Nor did he take into account what secrets and terrors the old cottage might hold.
'Fr Winter' is an intoxicating mix of love, lust, hate, and...


Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.

Autorenporträt
I am an author in my sixties living in Roscommon, Ireland. At the moment I am researching and writing in two different genres.
The first book I call 'Fr John Winter: worse things than dying.' It is a science versus religion scenario set in Athlone and partly in the US. After a period working with my father on a water treatment scheme in Athlone in the 1980s I became fascinated with the medieval town. My stories are set around and in Athlone and the local lake, Lough Ree. The lake has over fifty islands and at least twenty of those have legends attached to them and have been inhabited at some point. In my first book, Mutation, I added a fictional island of my own and I have added another for my second novel, 'Fr John Winter: worse things than dying.' This present book draws on my own experience and research I carried out on Lough Ree, Athlone and eugenics, a subject I researched in depth and became intrigued with.
My other 'franchise' (as I like to call it), is based on a group of guys working on construction in Ireland in the 1980s. I have based this book on my own experience working on sites in the 1970s and '80 all over Ireland. This work will also shortly be available on Smashwords on preorder. Think of it as an Irish equivalent of Auf Wiedersehen Pet. :)
I put many years of research into Fr Winter, especially on psychic phenomena (Did you know, the author of Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, was fascinated by the subject?) and eugenics and the science of DNA manipulation (recombinant DNA technology) A gained a BA and an M.Litt in later years which was a great help in doing this research.
My Construction guys took a lot less research. I have managed to produce the first book in a year. The second one is three-quarter finished. I hope you will enjoy my stories as much as I have enjoyed putting these worlds together. I have always, from an early age, wanted to write, and I feel so lucky to now finally be getting that opportunity.
Thank you and keep reading. Writers are nothing without our readers.