The Dreamer's Lament (novel): Difference between revisions

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* Anne finally tells Alun the whole story of her father's death and continued existence in the [[astral plane]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Night of the Intelligence (novel)|Night of the Intelligence]]'')
* Anne finally tells Alun the whole story of her father's death and continued existence in the [[astral plane]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Night of the Intelligence (novel)|Night of the Intelligence]]'')
* Alistair has a conversation with his mother about his recent breakup with [[Sally Wright]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Daughters of Earth (novel)|The Daughters of Earth]]'')
* Alistair has a conversation with his mother about his recent breakup with [[Sally Wright]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Daughters of Earth (novel)|The Daughters of Earth]]'')
* Alistair and Chorley discuss Dominex. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Mutually Assured Domination (novel)|Mutually Assured Domination]]'')


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Revision as of 18:50, 6 June 2018

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prose stub

The Dreamer's Lament was the thirteenth novel in the Lethbridge-Stewart series.

Publisher's summary

While visiting his mother, Lethbridge-Stewart is a little perturbed when Harold Chorley calls to ask for his help. A train from Bristol has gone missing, and Chorley is convinced it has something to do with the Keynsham Triangle, where over fifty people have vanished without trace since the early 1800s.

Elsewhere, Anne Travers is coming to terms with a loss in her family and sets about preparing for his funeral. However, news reaches her that both Lethbridge-Stewart and Chorley have gone missing, and her help is required to find them. And, hopefully, solve the mystery of the Keynsham Triangle.

What connects the missing train to the Triangle, what has it got to do with a Wren from the 1940s, and just why does it appear that Lethbridge-Stewart and Chorley are in the village of Keynsham in 1815?

The answers lie in the Dreamers Lament, and a strange being called the Loa.

Plot

to be added

Characters

to be completed

References

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Notes

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Continuity