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A01=Jake Arnott
Abstract painting
Aleister Crowley
Art
Author_Jake Arnott
Black magic
Black magick
British folk horror
British horror
British seaside
Category=FBA
Category=FKM
Category=FKW
Cave
Caves
Cliff
Coastal folk horror
Coastal horror
Crowley
Dark magic
Dark magick
East Sussex
English folk horror
English horror
English seaside
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
Folk horror
Folk horror book
Folk horror books
Folk horror novel
Folk horror novels
Folk horror stories
Folk horror story
forthcoming
Gothic
Hastings
Hastings caves
Horror
Horror book
Horror books
Horror novel
Horror novels
Horror stories
Horror story
Magic symbols
Magical symbols
Magick
Moonchild
Occult
Occultism
Painting
Seaside
Spell
Sussex
UK folk horror
UK horror
Witch bottle

Product details

  • ISBN 9781835416594
  • Weight: 255g
  • Dimensions: 130 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Titan Books Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A sensuous, vivid and unsettling modern gothic tale about a couple who move to the seaside town of Hastings and find themselves living in the former home of a notorious local occultist over whom the shadow of former town resident Aleister Crowley looms large. Ideal for fans of Andrew Michael Hurley or Francine Toon.

Exhausted by the pressures of life in London, Justine and Adam move to Hastings. With Adam’s failed career as an artist and a recent miscarriage causing rifts in their marriage, Justine wants this to be a fresh start for them. As they try to settle into their new seaside home, they find a bolted door in their basement, behind which is a cave. Adam feels a strange but enchanting pull to the cave while apprehension begins to claw at Justine.

Inside the cave, they find a witch bottle and with this discovery, the couple begin to uncover disturbing rumours about the home’s previous owner, John Malachy. A sinister figure, Malachy was known for his obsession with chaos magic, and association with Sacred Disease - a band that rose to fame in the 80s that supposedly experimented with blood magic and occult forces and was made a scapegoat in the media due to their association with satanism. Justine and Adam seek answers from James Blackwood, a local occultist and former member of Sacred Disease. He warns them to leave things be and not to tamper with ancient rituals, dark magic and secrets long buried in the past. But John Malachy is long dead and surely everything the media said about him was only superstition?

Despite Blackwood's warning, Adam can’t resist opening the witch bottle. With this, a sinister chain of events begins to unfold. Justine notices that Adam’s behaviour changes and the obsession he once had with his art is reignited but begins to veer into something unnatural. Justine herself wakes night after night, haunted by the screams of a young woman that seem to come from the cave beneath the house.

When Justine once again finds herself pregnant, and people in the town begin to turn up dead or missing, the lines between truth, reality and the mystical all begin to blur. The ghosts of John Malachy and the one and only Aleister Crowley himself loom large and a dark sacrificial reckoning closes in on both Justine and Adam.

Jake Arnott was born in 1961 and lives in London. He is the author of The Long Firm, published by Sceptre in 1999 and subsequently made into an acclaimed, BAFTA-winning BBC TV series. His second novel, He Kills Coppers, was also made into a series by Channel 4. He has since published the novels Truecrime, Johnny Come Home, The Devil’s Paintbrush, The House of Rumour and, most recently, The Fatal Tree (2017). In 2005, Arnott was ranked one of Britain's 100 most influential LGBT people. Twitter/X: @JakeArnott; Instagram: @jakearnottauthor

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