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Reviewed by Stephen Christopher for Readers' Favorite
Simon Chewton is a journalist for The Daily Trumpet, and he has stumbled upon some unusual things going on in Glastonbury. A group of new-age feminists is encouraging people, men and women, to join their community, one without technology, and where women rule. Philomena is the beautiful, albeit at times frightening, leader of the group. When rumors abound that the group may in fact be a Satanic cult, and with the spotting of giant extinct creatures like saber cats and woolly mammoths, Simon smells a newspaper story worth investigating. It’s when people start to go missing, including his girlfriend Jenny, that he decides to go ahead and join the cult. Once he gets there, he stumbles onto something he finds impossible to believe. Can he rescue Jenny and get away from the cult with his mind and body intact? You’ll have to read The Glastonbury Triangle by Stephen Ford to find out.
The Glastonbury Triangle astonished me as I had few expectations going in, but, boy, was I surprised by an entertaining story. Simon Chewton is the everyday man who, once he steps up, manages to prove himself. Stephen Ford has created a group of fascinating, hard-to-forget characters who all assist in making this at times incredible plot work. I found myself racing through the final chapters to get to the end to find out what would happen. It’s almost impossible to put this into one genre; there’s fantasy, science fiction, drama, romance, cultism, and witchcraft all wrapped up in a thriller. Readers of any of these genres, with an open mind, will enjoy this book. There’s very little swearing, but there are some highly suggestive sex scenes, which suggest this is suited for a more mature audience.