Our site will be undergoing maintenance from 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 20. During this time, Bookshop, checkout, and other features will be unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Cookies must be enabled to use this website.
Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available

See inside

Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Thrillers / Suspense
  • Language:English
  • Pages:462
  • eBook ISBN:9781098348526

Lord Byron's Ring

by James Pumpelly

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available

See inside

Overview
Revered and envied in the Oklahoma badlands town their mansion overlooks, the Burden's love affair is both lusty and lush, explicit and ethereal, their union seemingly impervious to life's entrapments. But while vacationing in Salzburg, Austria, their fortunes reverse when a blackmailing businessman, with enemies to spare, swoops down from the Panhandle oil fields to threaten Jack Burden's drilling ventures— only to turn up dead. Motives of revenge and greed darken the plot, reasons which soon lead Drew into the path of murder— and to a medium who conjures Lord Byron's ghost.
Description
From the author of The Girl with the Pendant Pearl and Twice Melvin, comes James Pumpelly's latest novel, Lord Byron's Ring. Excruciatingly intense and seasoned with mystery, romance and action, Lord Byron's Ring is dream haunting, running the gamut from dystopic to paradisical, a metaphysical thriller that keeps you turning pages. Devoted wife and mother, degreed historian and devotee of Byron, Sara Burden is her husband's heroine; Jack the only man who leaves her breathless. Their scholarly and popular teenage son, Drew, completes the idyllic family. Revered and envied in the Oklahoma badlands town their mansion overlooks, the Burden's love affair is both lusty and lush, explicit and ethereal, their union seemingly impervious to life's entrapments. But while vacationing in Salzburg, Austria, their fortune reverses when a blackmailing businessman, with enemies to spare, swoops down from the Panhandle oil fields to threaten Jack's drilling ventures, only to turn up dead. Motives of revenge and greed darken the plot, reasons which soon lead Drew into the path of murder - and to a medium who conjures Lord Byron's ghost. Jack Burden is a compassionate man, drawn to the unfortunates by his impoverished youth. Sara is his candle in the window, a beautiful woman discovering the potential of her sexuality in this graphic, lyrical bonding of two disparate hearts. The author leads us into the extraordinary, imaginative dimensions of the family's intimacies, a family bound by a desperate need - and a dreadful secret - in this suspenseful, hypnotically readable novel about murder, madness, power, love, spirit mediums, and the hypocrisy of religious dogmas. Pumpelly's contrapuntal theme is at once a rigadoon of rascality and a paean of passion, his exquisitely defined characters giving impetus to the big question, one not answered until the closing scene. Ingenious, intellectually exciting and shocking, Lord Byron's Ring is a powerful portrait of family, faith and fortune fusing like Roman candles over the shadowlands of failure. A riveting provocation of the improbable you can't put out of your mind.
About the author
Reared by traveling evangelists, my sheltered years were a moth-swarm of questions and quandaries. Like drawn curtains against the sun, my naiveté rebuffed the dazzle of temporal joy. I feigned comprehension, for to do otherwise was to be reproached by the happiness of others– until the milieu of university curricula enlightened me. As Eudora Welty wrote, "A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within." In retrospect, I treasure the innocent years– as most do– a kind of throwback to Thoreau's life at Walden. Yet, as I write, I suspect only God and romanticists empathize with my quest, my yearning for warmth— like a meadow on a summer day. Peace. A palliative of which the world is bereft. Having eyes that see, and ears that hear (in the biblical sense), I often feel complicit in the world's duress; escaping via demiurgical expression, creating characters, places and events by the whim of fancy. Freud instructs us to hold our parents accountable for our problematic existence, Marx tells us we should point the finger at the upper class, when, in truth, we have only ourselves at fault. Blake believed if the doors of perception were cleansed, we would see everything as it is. Infinite. But truth is beyond the rim of the Buddhist Wheel of Becoming. Beyond thought, even. Accordingly, I've stumbled through the fifty states, and much of Europe and Asia, gathering impressions for my narrative. To quote Melville, "This world clean fails me: still I yearn." Such hunger funds the heart, the will to live. As the journey lengthens and the destination seems never nearer, I've grown to accept that my journey IS the destination. A writer's duty, I think, is to brave possibilities. Temerity breathes life into characters. Accepting the challenge, I've been writing since the mid seventies— poetry (that window on the soul) and short stories, reflecting the uniqueness of station and locale. Before college, I was homeschooled, due to my parents' constant travel. As an adult, I've called home by many names: Texas, Georgia, Florida, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Louisiana, among them. My hobbies include reading, cooking, gardening, and piano (the latter one of my college majors). Surmounting these four, is writing, making memories into more than they were; for memories are living things, conjoining the past and the future, resurrecting the dead and imagining the unborn. Two thousand years ago, Pilate asked Christ, "What is truth?" the answer being every man's quest– to which I add another Pilate excerpt: "What I have written I have written."