A spellbinding tale of lost love, murder, and madness, that sweeps from the boisterous music halls of East London to a desolate Herefordshire mansion to reveal the darkest of secrets.

SOME SECRETS ARE BETTER LEFT BURIED …

When seventeen year old Phoebe Turner visits Wilton’s Music Hall to watch her Aunt Cissy perform, she risks the wrath of her mother who marches with the Hallelujah army and campaigns for all the theatres and bars to be closed down. While at Wilton’s, Phoebe meets an enigmatic stranger who then goes on to heralds changes in the lives of all three women ~ and who offers young Phoebe the position of companion to his reclusive ailing wife. Phoebe then leaves her East End home for an eerie country house. A house that may be haunted, and that holds the darkest secrets and truths about her past.

A SOMNAMBULIST, PAINTING BY MILLAIS

Here’s Essie having a chance to view the painting that inspired her novel’s name and the theme of ‘sleepwalking’ ~ whether in reality or, in Phoebe’s case, due to being blind to the most obvious of truths, almost from the start of the novel.

The painting came up for auction at Sotheby’s the very week the novel was published, and that’s where this photograph was taken.

Some of the real places in the novel that you can still visit today

PRAISE FOR THE SOMNAMBULIST

Deliciously unsettling. THE INDEPENDENT

Memorable and unusual. THE TIMES

The glee with which Fox approaches her material is infectious. THE GUARDIAN

Essie Fox transports us to the Victorian squalor of London’s East End for a tale of illegitimacy, incest and theatricality with so many twists that you’ll want to read it in one sitting. COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE

Riven with suspense … my fingers itched to turn the last page. J J MOYES

An absorbing read. THE BOOKSELLER

This is a gutsy page-turning novel with a delightful heroine… larger than life Dickensian characters and generous supply of plot twists and turns. But it is no pastiche. It is an affectionate and knowledgeable homage to the genre and a thumping good read. HISTORICAL NOVELS REVIEW