The Prince of Mist by Carlos Ruiz Zafron
Text Publishing, 2010. ISBN 9781921656354.
(Age 11+) Recommended. When Max Carver's father decides to move his
family to a small town on the coast, Max is fascinated by the secrets
in the old house that they live in. It has a strange garden with
statues that look like a circus troop. An eerie clown statue which
stands at the centre of the six-pointed star in the garden, seems to
come alive. A black cat with strange eyes attaches itself to the family
and they find old films belonging to the previous owners, the
Fleischmanns, whose son has died in mysterious circumstances. In the
bay below the house is a ship that was wrecked many years before in a
terrible storm. Max meets Roland and together with his sister Alicia,
they go diving to investigate the shipwreck. Gradually the chilling
story of the Prince of Mists emerges.
The Prince of Mist was first published in 1993 and was
specifically
written for young adults by Carlos Ruiz Zafron who has had enormous
success
with his adult novel Shadow of the wind. It is a haunting story
of the
evil Dr Cain who promises wish fulfilment, but at a terrible price. I
was fascinated with the idea of having a wish granted and it was a
compelling exercise to see what people were prepared to give up to gain
what they wanted. The story is much more subtle than found in many of
the gothic thrillers around, and although deceptively easy to read,
leaves behind much to think about.
Told in the third person, all the characters are fleshed out well. Max
is an inquisitive boy, who is determined to find out about the
frightening Clown apparition. The Prince of Mists emerges as a very
sinister and frightening character, who is scary enough to stay in the
reader's memory. Roland and Alicia's delicate romance add to the
interest and the adults in the family, seen through the eyes of Max,
are believable.
I thoroughly enjoyed this suspenseful, well-written and creepy ghost
story.
Pat Pledger