‘The Atwelle Confession’ Tell a chilling tale through two time periods
I don’t read many murder mystery novels. When I heard about The Atwelle Confession, it intrigued me. It was a book that surprised me in a few ways. I was able to get a review copy and here is what I thought of it.
You can read the plot for The Atwelle Confession here:
After discovering rare gargoyles mysteriously positioned inside an ancient church being restored in the small English town of Atwelle, architect Don Whitby and a young research historian, Margeaux Wood, realize that the gargoyles are predicting the bizarre murders that are occurring in the town.
Five hundred years earlier when the church is constructed, two powerful families in Atwelle are contesting control of the region in the fraught backdrop of King Henry VIII’s dispute with the pope over the king’s divorce. In the middle of these conflicts, the same bizarre murders are being committed in the town.

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I was a bit confused by The Atwell Confession at first. The story jumping between these two time periods didn’t make a ton of sense to me. Yet as the story moves along, it all began to come into focus. The characters were alright, and the narrative is one people have to be patient with. I did like the ending, didn’t see it coming at all. I won’t say this is a book everyone will like, but most people will enjoy it. To learn more about The Atwelle Confession click on this website.
The Atwelle Confession comes out September 19th. You can order this book on Amazon, at Barnes and Noble and on IndieBooks.
