Kehua

Kehua

by Fay Weldon (Author)

Synopsis

A kehua is a Maori ghost - the wandering dead searching for their ancestral home. Without the proper rituals to send them on their way, kehua are forced to remain on Earth to haunt their relatives. They're not dangerous, and they even try to help the living, though it's wise not to listen to them. They tend to get things wrong...In the wake of murder and suicide, a young woman flees New Zealand, hoping to escape the past and find a new life. But the unshriven spirits of the recently departed can't rest peacefully, and are forced to emigrate with her, crossing oceans to finally settle in - of all places - Muswell Hill, London. Here their shadowy flutterings and murmured advice haunts the young woman and her female bloodline across the decades, across the generations. 'Run!' the Kehua whisper. 'Run, run, run!'

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Publisher: Corvus
Published: 01 Aug 2010

ISBN 10: 1848874596
ISBN 13: 9781848874596

Media Reviews
* CHALCOT CRESCENT was a sensation: * * *
Weldon back to her best - an apocalypse-very-soon-from-now delivered with her trademark warm-hearted cynicism and bone-dry wit. * Daily Mail *
Reads like a first novel... it's so fresh and vibrant and funny. The funniest dystopian novel I've ever read. And I don't think it's going to date. * Boyd Hilton *
Weldon's mischievous blend of fact and fiction produces a hybrid that is at once futuristic satire, tragedy and tongue-in-cheek memoir... The plot is bonkers, but enormous fun... A persuasive fable: sinister, clever, funny and vintage Weldon. * Independent *
I just adored it... Hugely funny and surprisingly sinister -- Sadie Jones
Sparkles with wit and acute observation * Guardian *
Weldon's impish sense of humour and gimlet-eyed social observations stand out * Sunday Times *
Really rather bonkers. Exceptionally good, but bonkers * Daily Telegraph *
This potent brew of social comment, dystopian satire, viscious comedy and vintage Weldon wisdom is a marvellous ride * The Times *
Author Bio
Fay Weldon was brought up in New Zealand. Creator of the slogan 'Go to work on an egg', writer of the first ever episode of Upstairs Downstairs and current Professor of Creative Writing at Brunel University, Fay is best known for her novels Praxis, The Life and Loves of a She-Devil and Worst Fears. In 2001 she was awarded a CBE. She lives on a hilltop in Dorset with her husband.