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  • Published: 23 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9781473546875
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 104

Adamtine




For every action, there is always an equal and opposite reaction. A haunting new tale from the author of the mysterious Britten & Brulightly.

All people could do was speculate on the fate of those who vanished - strangers; seemingly random, unconnected: all plucked from their lives and never seen again. The notes found left behind, apparently describing some slender reason for their removal, were all that linked them. They were all delivered by one man.

Rodney Moon had admitted seeing those who had been disappeared and to passing the notes, but denied any involvement beyond that. Who wrote the letters, then? Moon shrugged during the trial: 'It has no name,' he said. 'It's a bogeyman. A monster.'

He was not mourned when the vengeful bereft finally found him.

Some years later, four strangers; seemingly random, unconnected, all take the last train home. But something each of them has forgotten - or is trying to forget - is catching up with them; with a terrible, inexorable purpose. The devil is in the detail, as they say.

  • Published: 23 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9781473546875
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 104

About the author

Hannah Berry

Hannah Berry is the author of two highly praised graphic novels, Britten and Brulightly and Adamtine. She lives in Brighton.

Also by Hannah Berry

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Praise for Adamtine

A compulsively readable modern whodunit

Stylist

Easily the best graphic novel I’ve read this year… Both the story and the art are just brilliant and I’ve never felt the fear of a story communicated better…each twist and turn is utterly captivating and the ending is both shocking and inventive

Dog Ear Discs

Much of Adamtine's pleasure lies in how disconcerting it all is. The tricky narrative, however, is nicely counterbalanced by Berry’s clear and carefully detailed illustrations, and a deceptively simple visual style that keeps the storytelling on solid ground, even when things take an alarming turn for the weirder

The List

Hannah Berry’s stunning artwork is painstakingly meticulous and her narratives are always thought-provoking and playful.

Cath Tate and Nicola Street