John Chapel is a statistician's dream: he's twenty-nine, has a loving wife and son, a comfortable home, and a promising career. Then he meets the stunningly beautiful, mysterious Ixora, and his life starts to change disturbingly.He first sees her running across the rainswept steps of Waterloo Station. When they meet again, Ixora denies having been there. Odder still, John discovers her in a film containing exactly the same sequence. So begins a dreamlike relationship that escalates into a nightmare.Despite his good intentions, John finds himself embarking on a passionate affair. But violence and death track the ill-fated couple as John risks his home, his career and his life to save Ixora from a horrific destiny. Now the subject of a police investigation, he finds himself trapped in a vortex of spreading evil which may claim his very soul...First published in the early 90s, Red Bride confirmed Fowler's place at the vanguard of modern horror fiction.
From Publishers Weekly
Set in contemporary London, this lackluster horror/suspense novel by the author of Bureau of Souls demonstrates that the right parts don't always form a satisfactory whole. John Chapel quits a boring corporate job to try his hand at public relations, but remains the quintessential family man--until he meets the beautiful Ixora De Corizo, a model and actress who becomes his first and only client, then expertly seduces him. Strange men warn John away from Ixora, only to turn up as victims in a bizarre and gruesome series of slayings; nevertheless, he divorces his wife to marry this woman with a mysterious past. The fragmented narrative never successfully meshes the sordid domestic drama of John and Ixora's life together with the horror of the ongoing murders. Fowler's decision to describe the killings without revealing the perpetrator's identity is meant to heighten the suspense, but it only detracts from Ixora's menace. To make matters worse, John is a wishy-washy, unsympathetic protagonist; apparently unmoved by the violent slayings taking place around them, he doubts his new wife's integrity and entertains notions of returning to suburbia. As character after character meets a savage, senseless demise, the lovers plod along toward a less than shocking climax. Though Fowler's descriptive powers are considerable, they mainly disguise the hollowness of this effort. Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
John Chapel is a London insurance agent who quits his job and goes to work for a public relations firm. His first client is Ixora de Corizo, a beautiful model of mysterious background who is acting in her first film. Chapel falls in love, abandons his family, moves into the crumbling de Corizo mansion with Ixora, and finally marries her. Chapel's descent into this romantic maelstrom is paralleled by the occurrence of seven vicious murders that lead the police closer to Ixora. Fowler's fifth novel (following Rune , LJ 1/91) is a rare treat--one of those unbelievable narratives that in the hands of a lesser writer would seem excessive, if not ridiculous. Fowler manages to pull it off with good writing and swift plotting. Recommended wherever juicy crime fiction is enjoyed.- A.J. Wright, Univ. of Alabama, BirminghamCopyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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- Release Date 07/14/2016
- Author Christopher Fowler
- Language English
- Company Transworld Digital
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