Member Reviews

The past and the present intermingle in this psychological thriller, in which Sam will finally discover the meaning of the visions he has had since his childhood.
Sam is a medium who has been invited to an archaeological excavation to contact the spirits of the people who were sacrificed on the site, a henge known as The Daughters of Carrawburgh. From the moment of his arrival, he is involved in a series of mysterious and paranormal events that contribute to the suspense and action of this book.
I received this book from NetGalley and this is my honest and personal opinion.

Was this review helpful?

brilliant psychological thriller. I couldn't put it down and completely enjoyed reading it. The storyline, the situations, the narration is well-crafted and as a reader, I was well-swayed by how the story developed.

Was this review helpful?

I think this book is a good psychological thriller. It has psychics and a discovery of more gruesome archaeological finds. Sam is a very exciting character and the different experience he has are hair raising. I was very lost in this book and excited by it the whole time. * I received this book from Netgalley and this is my honest review*

Was this review helpful?

***This book was reviewed for Troubadour Publishing Limited via Netgalley***

Daughters of Carrawburgh is a first-rate psychological thriller that you simply can't put down! I lost myself in this book, and finished it in a single day, so engrossing was it.


Sam Layton is a spiritualist. Not the cold reader, the charlatan psychic who is simply adept at deciphering people from miniscule clues that pass most people's’ attention. No, Sam is the real deal. From a young age, Sam has heard the spirits of those passed on. As he grew to an adult, he turned his 'gift’, as he calls it, to granting peace to those who are grieving.


When we meet Sam, he has been hired to scope out psychic impressions at the henge known as the Daughters of Carrawburgh. While there, he meets archaeologists Emma and Paul Carter, hired by the same person who hired Sam, to find evidence of ritual human sacrifice. Although Sam has some interesting paranormal experiences, he is unable to verify what his employer wishes to know.
Fast forward several months, and Sam has returned to the sleepy town of Wraxbridge, now quiet for the fall. Emma is still there, working the digs, though Paul is not. This time Sam’s paranormal experiences take on a frighteningly real cast. As autumn turns to with Ter, Sam once again returns to the area, hopeful of seeing Emma, though equally afraid to. His one-time employer shows up, desiring to enlist Sam’s help one last time. Things take a swerve into X-Files territory (as if earlier events didn't…). Can Sam solve his paranormal problems with everyone intact?


I really like the cover. I think it is supposed to be Emma, but it reminds me of Cloud Strife from Final Fantasy: Advent’s Children. Yes, I have weird associations. As an archaeologist by my earliest trade, I have a love for books playing with those topics, and for pictures to


📚📚📚📚📚 Perfect for those who love psychological thrillers that tease with preternatural possibilities.

Was this review helpful?

I actually quite like the story here but I found it hard to access due to the choppy scence changes and idiosyncratic punctuation. I really like occult detectives and paranormal mystery but this book made me work way to hard in a bad way. I felt like it needed another pass with an editor. There's the bones of a good book here but pace and tension are essential in mysteries and this just sort of squandered what tension it had.

Was this review helpful?

This book was OK! I feel like the dialogue was a little crazy! I liked the main plot of the book but felt like their could be more action

Was this review helpful?