Lianne
Written on Jan 24, 2014
Solsbury Hill had a promising premise: wild moors, an old estate, family secrets. Indeed Eleanor’s experiences throughout the novel really captures the whirlwind of revelations and a change of pace that she greatly needed given the circumstances she found herself in at the start of the story. But despite of the intrigue, the novel failed to truly capture my attention or garner my sympathy for the main character. While I appreciated the quick pace of the novel, after a while I found that the story moved a little too quicky, with some scenes feeling far too brief for me to establish an understanding with Eleanor’s situation.
Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights is used as a framework for the story but it felt almost unnecessary; while I understood Eleanor’s crossroads situation, I thought the decision before her was a lot clearer as opposed to dragging it out the way it was in the story.
Solsbury Hill does give a sense of location–the moors, the quiet English countryside life–and the mystery about the estate was interesting enough to keep me tuned in to the end. Otherwise I never really connected with the characters or the situations that they found themselves in.