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The Invisible Ones
 
 
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The Invisible Ones [Hardcover]

Stef Penney
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
RRP: £18.99
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 350 pages
  • Publisher: Quercus (25 Aug 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0857382926
  • ISBN-13: 978-0857382924
  • Product Dimensions: 24 x 16 x 4.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 20,686 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Stef Penney
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Product Description

Review

'Penney is a good storyteller. She unfurls various mysterious plot possibilities and unearths the insecurities that lurk in families and relationships. She imagines the Romany world carefully, avoiding cliché or judgement or anything too negative ... there are moments of transcendence here, moments where Penney's writing really excels' Sunday Times.

'a gripping yarn' Daily Telegraph. 'If her debut was a literary Western, then her new tale is something of a bookish version of a Bogart puzzler. As a film graduate, Penney's approach to prose is cinematic and inclusive' Independent on Sunday.

'It would take far longer than my allotted space to explain the dense plot of this highly impressive thriller ... A terrific novel with much disturbing wisdom amid the thrills' A N Wilson in Reader's Digest. ' ... intriguing mystery' Woman and Home.

'...haunting tale ... this is a beautifully crafted novel with skilful characterisation and a plot which twists and turns ... this story of loss, deceit and family tragedy lingers long after you've finished the book' Daily Express. 'Penney's portrayal of the gypsy way of life is sympathetic. Seemingly bizarre customs are given a context; strong love is set against deadening control ... Ivo's return trip to Lourdes with JJ, Christo and their grandmother is a marvellously atmospheric piece of writing' Financial Times.

'...gripping novel ... [comparing The Invisible Ones to the film Chinatown:] there is shared mood and mystery, a slow clearing of muddied waters' Glasgow Herald. 'What readers will remember is the way of life that Penney describes so evocatively and the myth-exploding details about travelling families ... I still found it hard to put down' Literary Review.

'The mystery element of the story is adroitly handled, as clues and subtle inconsistencies in the Janko story are dropped in. Yet its destination is a total surprise, and if that is because it stretches the bounds of credibility, Penney is confident enough to let her characters say exactly that. The Invisible Ones is a book about love, deception, growing up, belonging, being an outsider and about how all our presents are haunted by our pasts. Its author is a supreme story-teller on top form' The Times.

'The skill and dedication to her craft shines through in her second novel ... the intrigue that is introduces in the first few pages rarely wears thin. The book's fluidity and pace is generally maintained by Penney's excellent characterisation. Lovell is a flawed but likeable lead with stereotypical traits that have been presented many times before but rarely this well ... this time around Penney has aimed for a character piece. Her characters are her environment: deep and well developed ... Happily Penney has crafted an arresting tale that is engrossing and leaves space to amuse the reader ... After writing a bestseller at her first attempt, Penney has avoided second book syndrome, delivering a dark and remarkably gripping novel' The Big Issue.

'...this is an accomplished, polished tale ... Penney takes her time building up suspense and drawing us into the heads of her characters, but never lets up on intriguing and mysterious situations. She is a true storyteller ... she knows how to tell a story, how to reach her readers and hold them from start to finish. Indeed, she may be one of the best storytellers we have at the moment' Scotsman.

'The search for the missing woman supplies a suspense which makes this a real page-turner ... Penney feels intensely the significance of space - on the one hand boundless frozen landscapes, on the other, the cramped confinement of the caravan ... A thoroughness underpins Penney's atmospheric creation and she is totally free from sentimentality ... Where will she take us next?' Independent. 'The sense of a muggy summer in Eighties Sussex, the mysteriously unconventional tensions of family misfortune, and the lovely light lilt of Penney's writing are all confidently combined in a dark-edged puzzle novel' Saga. '... an elegiac feel for a vanishing way of life' We Love This Book.

Product Description

Small-time private investigator Ray Lovell veers between paralysis and delirium in a hospital bed. But before the accident that landed him there, he had promised to find Rose Janko. Rose was married to the charismatic son of a travelling gypsy family, Ivo Janko. When Ray starts to investigate her disappearance he's surprised that her family are so hostile towards him. The Jankos have not had an easy past. They are a clan touched by tragedy - either they are cursed, or they are hiding a terrible secret. Could it be that Rose's discovery of that secret led to her disappearance all those years ago? Soon Ray wishes that he'd never asked the question. In a novel that is totally different from Stef's extraordinary debut The Tenderness of Wolves, she shows herself once more to be a matchless storyteller.

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.7 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Big Fat Gypsy Mystery, 10 Sep 2011
By 
Denise4891 (Cheshire) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Invisible Ones (Hardcover)
I don't envy Stef Penney the task of writing a follow-up to the Costa Award-winning The Tenderness of Wolves, and I'm glad she's gone for something completely different rather than trying to emulate her phenomenally successful debut novel.

The Invisible Ones is at heart an old-fashioned murder mystery, complete with an accident-prone, unlucky in love private investigator in the shape of Ray Lovell. I warmed to Ray instantly (it probably helped that he reminded me a lot of Kate Atkinson's Jackson Brodie). When we first meet him he's lying in a hospital bed with no memory of how he got there. Through a series of flashbacks we learn that Ray was hired by Leon Wood to find out what happened to his daughter Rose who disappeared six years earlier, shortly after her arranged marriage to fellow Gypsy, Ivo Janko. It also transpires that Ray was chosen to investigate Rose's disappearance because he too is of Romany descent.

As we know from the recent TV documentaries, Gypsy and travelling communities tend to be very private and wary of outsiders. That is certainly the case with the Jankos (with good reason), but other than that this isn't an in-depth exposé of Gypsy life and culture. The Jankos aren't part of a large travelling community but are living on the edge of `normal' society, with some members holding down jobs and going to school. They keep themselves to themselves due to a `family curse', the hereditary blood disorder which has resulted in very few male children making it past puberty. Ivo suffered from it as a child and his son Christo is now badly afflicted by it.

Ray's investigation unearths a number of skeletons which the Jankos would prefer to keep buried. Along the way he encounters quite a few red herrings which send him (and the reader) off down the wrong path, and the final twist is a bit of a shocker which I only saw coming at the very last minute. So all in all a very enjoyable read, but once again I stress that it's a very different kettle of fish to TTOW so don't be expecting more of the same. I'd certainly recommend it to fans of Kate Atkinson and other intelligent/less gruesome crime writers, and I did wonder whether Stef Penney had any plans to turn it into a series - I think there's plenty of mileage left in Ray and I'd like to see him investigating other crimes, both within and outside of the travelling community.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Gypsum and cheese, 13 Jan 2012
This review is from: The Invisible Ones (Hardcover)
I re-read 'Tenderness of Wolves' recently, and couldn't believe how good it was - I enjoyed it even more than the first time, and decided it was probably in my top three favourite novels of all time. It really is hard to believe that this is written by the same person. I couldn't really believe in any of the characters, and the child had such a stereotype 'I'm-a-child-aren't-I-cute-and-innocent' quality to him, I couldn't stomach it. It's annoyingly worthy in it's attempt to give you an insight into the gypsy community. And the plot! Less said about that, the better. The strange thing is that when I read a book like 'The Tenderness of Wolves', I am deeply awestruck at the ability of a human being to create a world and fill it with such fascinating characters, and use them to tell a gripping story in rich language. I know that I could never get anywhere near that level of creativity myself. With this one, I'm in danger of believing that I could have done better myself....
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Supposing this was Penney's first novel............, 18 Jan 2012
By 
You would think that writing a mesmeric, unusual, stunning first novel, which is both praised by critics and eagerly devoured by a larger public would be nothing but a blessing for an author. Until, of course, the brilliance of the first leaves them with the problem 'Follow That!'

The shadow of Tenderness of Wolves was very long, and Penney's follow up offering, perhaps far too eagerly awaited. I downloaded the sample chapter and read it, with a huge sense of disappointment, leaving it sitting on the Kindle for a month or two, without the compulsion to buy. However..............I took the time to accept this was not TOW, The Sequel, and tried again, this time putting the shadow of the former book behind me, and found The Invisible Ones began to grow on me. Not TOW - but Penney continues to be fascinated by the outsider, to explore a community and way of life which is different from the norm. Her characters have an awkwardness, even to themselves (I don't mean that the writer is awkward, I mean there is a misfit, ill at ease, bruised quality to them)

I liked the two male narrators, chapters flipping between each of their points of view, the broken hearted, on the edge of a divorce, half-gypsy private eye, looking in to the life his father came from, and rejected, and the young boy, who has only known the gypsy life, but is on the edges of perhaps leaving it, through the lure of learning and awakening sexuality.

As I weaned myself away from those disappointments that this wasn't that magical first novel, this second one began to acquire a certain charm of its own. I think if I had read this one first, I would have thought 'interesting writer, one to watch...' And she still is, without doubt. Maybe by the third novel, we will have forgiven her for the almost impossible to follow brilliance of her first
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