Customer Reviews
True horror - By: , 14 May 2002 
This is one of the strangest fortean investigations I have ever read. The first thing that grabs you is the striking front cover picture that seems to capture the "feeling of menace" that pervades the whole book.
The book lists the sightings of a frightening birdman which terrorises teenager in a desolate Cornish churchyard.
It soon transpires that the sightings of the Owlman were not the only strange things that were happening in Cornwalll at that time. Birds were behaving like in that famous Hitchcock film, farm animals disappeared; and, in a local zoo, animals were being mysteriously mutilated overnight.
The author cleverly links the high strangeness with the works of the surrealist artists Tony Shiels & Max Ernst. The Owlman, says Jonathan Downes, is a surreal manifestation.
This book is exciting from beginning to end & is essential reading for anyone interested in the paranormal.
In my opinion, this is a very important book.
Surreal Brilliance - By: J. Clarke, 28 Feb 2000 
I don't think that I've enjoyed a book so much in a long time. Apart from the fascinating investigation that lies at the heart of the book, I found a poignant yearning for a time long gone (the 1970's, to be specific), & lives changed & moulded by the passage of years. Make no mistake, this is primarily a Fortean work, but one with a human heart & quietly subversive sense of humour. I can't recommend it highly enough. Perhaps alll of us have a need for there to be a monster in the woods, if only to keep the child within us alive.