Follow Me To Ground by Sue Rainsford

Follow Me To Ground

by Sue Rainsford

'A tangled, gnarled, wonderfully original, strange, beautiful beast of a book'
DAISY JOHNSON, author of Everything Under

'Beautiful and terrifying' SUNDAY TIMES

'Seethingly assured debut fuses magical realism with critical and feminist theory' GUARDIAN

In house in a wood, Ada and her father live peacefully, tending to their garden and the wildlife in it. They are not human though. Ada was made by her father from the Ground, a unique patch of earth with birthing and healing properties. Though perhaps he didn’t get her quite right. They spend their days healing the local human folk – named Cures - who visit them, suspiciously, with their ailments.

When Ada embarks on a relationship with a local Cure named Samson, and is forced to choose between her old life with her father, and a new one with her human lover. Her decision will uproot the town – and the Ground itself – for ever.

A poised and simmering tour-de-force, FOLLOW ME TO GROUND is a sinister vision of desire and freewill, voiced in earthy prose and eviscerating detail by an astoundingly original new writer.

'Equal parts beauty and horror, and unlike anything you will read this year’ TEA OBREHT

'Fierce, palpable, hynoptic. A dazzling, troubling dream' COLIN BARRETT

'A writer to watch' METRO

'An astonishing debut heralding the career of an exciting new writer. Strange, lyrical, and arresting, this novel will draw readers into its extraordinary spell.' KIRKUS starred review

LONGLISTED FOR THE DESMOND ELLIOT PRIZE 2019

Reviewed by Whitney @ First Impressions Reviews on

4 of 5 stars

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First Impressions


Sue Rainsford's debut novel is dark and twisted and reminiscent of a fairy tale before Disney got their hands on it. Think Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs but without Prince Charming.

Story Impressions


Follow Me to Ground was creepy, like Joey Tribbiani putting The Shining in the freezer creepy. After I finished listening to the book I needed to decompress, clear my head, take a cold shower, and then I listened to it again. I am still pondering as to why I liked the book so much, the characters are all flawed and unlikeable, the plot is manic, but somehow it works. 

I was weirdly intriguing with Ada and her father, beings curing fellow villagers. However, I felt they did more harm than good, putting a little strangeness back with the diseased lung or womb. Also, while the writing is elegant and descriptive, Follow Me to Ground is not for the faint of heart. The curing procedures are in vivid detail with the author giving no notice to cover one's eyes.

I felt Samson, despite being human was the most inhuman character in the whole novel. He gave me the heebie-jeebies and my skin began to crawl when I thought about his perverted nature and his desire for Ada. Like the novel Room, where we are shown the story through the eyes of a naive child, we must read between the lines to get the full story. 

Audio Impressions


As for the audio, I loved that it was a multi-cast production with each curing getting its distinct voice. It added dimension to an already diverse story.

Overall Impression


I don't think this is a book for everyone as it is a bit peculiar and left just as many questions as answers. Although, I like that it made me think and mull over everything I had just absorbed. Follow Me to Ground is unique and unlike anything I have read before. Like the curing ground, it is a plot that needs to be churned over before coming back up for air. 


This review was originally posted on First Impressions Reviews

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 7 February, 2020: Finished reading
  • 7 February, 2020: Reviewed