The Hill in the Dark Grove

Author:   Liam Higginson
Publisher:   Pan Macmillan
ISBN:  

9781035069422


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   08 January 2026
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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The Hill in the Dark Grove


Overview

Carwyn and Rhian - the last in a long family line of sheep farmers - are living out a brutal year in their hillside farm, deep in the mountains of Eryri, North Wales. When Carwyn stumbles across a stone circle and some sort of burial mound in one of the fields on their land, he quickly develops an obsession. His wife, Rhian, meanwhile, is confronted with the growing realization that the man with whom she shares her life and home is slowly becoming a frightening stranger. As the harsh mountain winter closes in, Rhian finds herself alone with her increasingly peculiar husband, the mountains and the looming megalithic stones . . . Exquisitely written and impossible to put down, The Hill in the Dark Grove is a gorgeous story embedded in Welsh folklore. It is about love, growing old, a lost way of life and the lengths we go to to protect what we know.

Full Product Details

Author:   Liam Higginson
Publisher:   Pan Macmillan
Imprint:   Picador
Dimensions:   Width: 14.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.404kg
ISBN:  

9781035069422


ISBN 10:   1035069423
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   08 January 2026
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Witty, tender, ultimately terrifying. Evocative and deftly done; The Hill in the Dark Grove is a book of echoes, haunted by the sheer vastness of time and landscape, and how they enact upon us and the stories we tell. A celebration of love’s persistence, a summoning of ancient lore, a superb debut. -- Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of <i>The Mercies</i> Gracefully and lovingly rendered with the heft of folklore, land and history, The Hill in the Dark Grove evokes, in dazzling detail, the tribulations of everyday life and the grandeur of ancestry. Higginson takes us on a soul-stirring quest to unearth the past in order to anchor the present before it flitters away. A truly bewitching experience! -- Gerardo Sámano Córdova, author of <i>Monstrilio</i> 'Liam Higginson is a new talent in Welsh storytelling; atmospheric, chilling and incredibly touching, The Hill in the Dark Grove holds the reader in its arms, and shows us how our stories, our objects and memories, are shaped and held by the land' -- Joshua Jones, author of <i>Local Fires</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove is a sumptuously written, dark meditation on aging, obsolescence, and the brutalizing march of time and progress, as well as a chilling folk horror novel. There’s something long buried in the mountains of North Wales and within the sheep herders, Carwyn and Rhian, who are economically pushed beyond their limits; Liam Higginson expertly brings it all to the surface -- Paul Tremblay, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Horror Movie</i> and <i>A Head Full of Ghosts</i> A slow-burning reeking creep of a novel about eerie ancient places and dangerous interlopers. I loved it. -- Claire Fuller, author of <i>Unsettled Ground</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove adopts familiar Welsh myths and tales - retold to build the scaffolding for Higginson's unnerving saga, his compelling writing vibrates with unease through the intimacy of Carwyn and Rhian. -- Anthony Shapland, author of <i>A Room Above a Shop</i> Liam Higginson skilfully creates a troubling and loaded atmosphere in The Hill in the Dark Grove: a sense of a landscape as ancient but nonetheless unsettled. The novel is eerie in a way that is rich and abides in the mind. -- Garrett Carr, author of <i>The Boy from the Sea</i> An intensely imagined and beautifully crafted novel about myth, memory, landscape and the extraordinary, unworldly power of the deep past. Powerful, inventive and gripping to the very end. -- Ian McGuire, Booker-longlisted author of <i>The North Water</i>


Witty, tender, ultimately terrifying. Evocative and deftly done; The Hill in the Dark Grove is a book of echoes, haunted by the sheer vastness of time and landscape, and how they enact upon us and the stories we tell. A celebration of love’s persistence, a summoning of ancient lore, a superb debut. -- Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of <i>The Mercies</i> Gracefully and lovingly rendered with the heft of folklore, land and history, The Hill in the Dark Grove evokes, in dazzling detail, the tribulations of everyday life and the grandeur of ancestry. Higginson takes us on a soul-stirring quest to unearth the past in order to anchor the present before it flitters away. A truly bewitching experience! -- Gerardo Sámano Córdova, author of <i>Monstrilio</i> 'Liam Higginson is a new talent in Welsh storytelling; atmospheric, chilling and incredibly touching, The Hill in the Dark Grove holds the reader in its arms, and shows us how our stories, our objects and memories, are shaped and held by the land' -- Joshua Jones, author of <i>Local Fires</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove is a sumptuously written, dark meditation on aging, obsolescence, and the brutalizing march of time and progress, as well as a chilling folk horror novel. There’s something long buried in the mountains of North Wales and within the sheep herders, Carwyn and Rhian, who are economically pushed beyond their limits; Liam Higginson expertly brings it all to the surface -- Paul Tremblay, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Horror Movie</i> and <i>A Head Full of Ghosts</i> A slow-burning reeking creep of a novel about eerie ancient places and dangerous interlopers. I loved it. -- Claire Fuller, author of <i>Unsettled Ground</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove adopts familiar Welsh myths and tales - retold to build the scaffolding for Higginson's unnerving saga, his compelling writing vibrates with unease through the intimacy of Carwyn and Rhian. -- Anthony Shapland, author of <i>A Room Above a Shop</i> Liam Higginson skilfully creates a troubling and loaded atmosphere in The Hill in the Dark Grove: a sense of a landscape as ancient but nonetheless unsettled. The novel is eerie in a way that is rich and abides in the mind. -- Garrett Carr, author of <i>The Boy from the Sea</i> An intensely imagined and beautifully crafted novel about myth, memory, landscape and the extraordinary, unworldly power of the deep past. Powerful, inventive and gripping to the very end. -- Ian McGuire, Booker-longlisted author of <i>The North Water</i> A vivid exploration of struggle, obsession, mythmaking, and pastoral dread. With gritty and rhythmic prose, Higginson spins a hypnotic tale of twisted folklore that won’t let go -- Scott Preston, author of <i>The Borrowed Hills</i>


Witty, tender, ultimately terrifying. Evocative and deftly done; The Hill in the Dark Grove is a book of echoes, haunted by the sheer vastness of time and landscape, and how they enact upon us and the stories we tell. A celebration of love’s persistence, a summoning of ancient lore, a superb debut. -- Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of <i>The Mercies</i> Gracefully and lovingly rendered with the heft of folklore, land and history, The Hill in the Dark Grove evokes, in dazzling detail, the tribulations of everyday life and the grandeur of ancestry. Higginson takes us on a soul-stirring quest to unearth the past in order to anchor the present before it flitters away. A truly bewitching experience! -- Gerardo Sámano Córdova, author of <i>Monstrilio</i> 'Liam Higginson is a new talent in Welsh storytelling; atmospheric, chilling and incredibly touching, The Hill in the Dark Grove holds the reader in its arms, and shows us how our stories, our objects and memories, are shaped and held by the land' -- Joshua Jones, author of <i>Local Fires</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove is a sumptuously written, dark meditation on aging, obsolescence, and the brutalizing march of time and progress, as well as a chilling folk horror novel. There’s something long buried in the mountains of North Wales and within the sheep herders, Carwyn and Rhian, who are economically pushed beyond their limits; Liam Higginson expertly brings it all to the surface -- Paul Tremblay, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Horror Movie</i> and <i>A Head Full of Ghosts</i> A slow-burning reeking creep of a novel about eerie ancient places and dangerous interlopers. I loved it. -- Claire Fuller, author of <i>Unsettled Ground</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove adopts familiar Welsh myths and tales - retold to build the scaffolding for Higginson's unnerving saga, his compelling writing vibrates with unease through the intimacy of Carwyn and Rhian. -- Anthony Shapland, author of <i>A Room Above a Shop</i>


Witty, tender, ultimately terrifying. Evocative and deftly done; The Hill in the Dark Grove is a book of echoes, haunted by the sheer vastness of time and landscape, and how they enact upon us and the stories we tell. A celebration of love’s persistence, a summoning of ancient lore, a superb debut. -- Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of <i>The Mercies</i>


Witty, tender, ultimately terrifying. Evocative and deftly done; The Hill in the Dark Grove is a book of echoes, haunted by the sheer vastness of time and landscape, and how they enact upon us and the stories we tell. A celebration of love’s persistence, a summoning of ancient lore, a superb debut. -- Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of <i>The Mercies</i> Gracefully and lovingly rendered with the heft of folklore, land and history, The Hill in the Dark Grove evokes, in dazzling detail, the tribulations of everyday life and the grandeur of ancestry. Higginson takes us on a soul-stirring quest to unearth the past in order to anchor the present before it flitters away. A truly bewitching experience! -- Gerardo Sámano Córdova, author of <i>Monstrilio</i> 'Liam Higginson is a new talent in Welsh storytelling; atmospheric, chilling and incredibly touching, The Hill in the Dark Grove holds the reader in its arms, and shows us how our stories, our objects and memories, are shaped and held by the land' -- Joshua Jones, author of <i>Local Fires</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove is a sumptuously written, dark meditation on aging, obsolescence, and the brutalizing march of time and progress, as well as a chilling folk horror novel. There’s something long buried in the mountains of North Wales and within the sheep herders, Carwyn and Rhian, who are economically pushed beyond their limits; Liam Higginson expertly brings it all to the surface -- Paul Tremblay, <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Horror Movie</i> and <i>A Head Full of Ghosts</i> A slow-burning reeking creep of a novel about eerie ancient places and dangerous interlopers. I loved it. -- Claire Fuller, author of <i>Unsettled Ground</i> The Hill in the Dark Grove adopts familiar Welsh myths and tales - retold to build the scaffolding for Higginson's unnerving saga, his compelling writing vibrates with unease through the intimacy of Carwyn and Rhian. -- Anthony Shapland, author of <i>A Room Above a Shop</i> Liam Higginson skilfully creates a troubling and loaded atmosphere in The Hill in the Dark Grove: a sense of a landscape as ancient but nonetheless unsettled. The novel is eerie in a way that is rich and abides in the mind. -- Garrett Carr, author of <i>The Boy from the Sea</i> An intensely imagined and beautifully crafted novel about myth, memory, landscape and the extraordinary, unworldly power of the deep past. Powerful, inventive and gripping to the very end. -- Ian McGuire, Booker-longlisted author of <i>The North Water</i> A vivid exploration of struggle, obsession, mythmaking, and pastoral dread. With gritty and rhythmic prose, Higginson spins a hypnotic tale of twisted folklore that won’t let go -- Scott Preston, author of <i>The Borrowed Hills</i> Irresistibly steeped in Welsh mystery and myth, this compelling folklore horror merges the nightmares of the living with long-dead terrors of the past -- Essie Fox, author of <i>The Fascination</i>


Author Information

Liam Higginson was born and raised in rural North Wales and now works in the arcade management office at Llandudno Pier. The Hill in the Dark Grove is his debut novel.

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Latest Reading Guide

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