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Daughters of the Oak
- Narrated by: Lesley Dessalles
- Length: 5 hrs and 37 mins
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Summary
Before Salem, there was Manningtree.
The present.
Something sinister lurks in quiet suburbia. A paranormal team investigates poltergeist activity terrorizing one family in the unassuming Essex town of Manningtree. As night falls, a nightmare awaits them; whatever the motive, it is personal.
The past.
England is rife with civil war. Life is cheap and death trivial. Though, for the common man, another war rages. It spreads like wildfire, preying on the weak. God-fearing folk employ the skills of one man, the Witchfinder. His success speaks of a talent to seek out and rid the countryside of witches, the Devil's whores.
Lies and persecution are never forgotten. Welcome to the nightmare. Welcome to Manningtree.
What listeners say about Daughters of the Oak
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- mrs janice holt
- 05-10-22
Excellent
Read Daughters of the Oak after sampling, so glad I did.
It's a documentary drama with facts about the Witch Finder General with a sad story behind it.
The way women were called witches because they used nature for healing was horrendous.
The writer captured the essence of the time perfectly it kept me enthralled.
The narrator brought the characters to life.
Definitely my kind of book and look forward to reading more from Becky Wright.
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- Peregrine
- 08-10-22
Absolutly brilliant
As I retire to bed with my cup if cocoa, armed with my kindle and my best set of headphones I am ready to open up my imagination to my audio book. Who of us avid gothic readers have not at some time or another, relished that sinister chill running down one’s spine when a new book and audiobook of the genre has been published. I had read “The Manningtree Account” some time before, and I confess that I was a little reluctant to read “The Daughters of the Oak” but I need not have been concerned. And wow! Am I glad I didn’t because “The Daughters of the Oak” is a superb story. It is not a history of Mathew Hopkins’ activities in Manningtree. Essex. circa 1644-46, per se, but he is always on the periphery throughout the book. It is a book of fiction, but is set during the historical period of the English Civil War where life has become cheap and death trivial.
The present. Manningtree. October 2016: As poltergeist activity brings terror to a family who are scared, nay petrified of this devilish spiritual activity. A paranormal team are called to investigate, but it seems that all the weight of the past with its the darkness and evil seems to have penetrated into the very fabric of time itself. The story seamlessly transfers you between the past and the present day and it becomes obvious that there is a very personal connection between the young woman Hopkins seeks to destroy, and Mathew the Witchfinder himself. The author, with great skill and tenacity weaves a time shift that holds your imagination to the last. The modern-day tale is as harrowing as the 17th century one, as we witness the past destroying the lives of the present in a truly unnerving and unsettling way. The story is well researched and well worth the listening too and so as I slip into slumber after listening to Ms Wrights latest offering and whilst having scared the wits out of myself, I am content and know I am well served.
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- Pen Name
- 26-10-21
Only got one star because the review won’t let me.
It’s the wrong sort of horror. I was horrified, not by the story but by the the way the author seemed to enjoy the violation of the girl. It was creepy and distasteful. I’m no prude but it was as if the writer was really “getting off” on the description. Sorry for the slang term , saying she was aroused by it in an embarrassing way may be too blunt. Had there been any shred of story I may have forgiven her but there wasn’t. Save money and time, avoid like the plague.
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