

An enigmatic teenage girl is referred to a psychiatric clinic, but what if she and her story come to threaten her doctor’s own sense of what is real?
When Dr. Chris Evenson meets Catherine Abercrombie, he is shocked to realise that not only is she the subject of a mysterious picture story he has just received in the post, but that she is uncannily like someone he knew in his youth. As he seeks to sympathetically endorse her sense of who she is while maintaining proper professional distance, his attempts to understand her begin to weaken his own ability to distinguish reality from delusion.
Firebird explores that hazy boundary between what we consider delusion, and what we perceive to be real. Readers of drafts have said:-
‘A journey into the mind that is at times harrowing, yet at the same time oddly calming and peaceful. The dream like quality of the narrative is entrancing.’
‘I loved this book – I was delighted by the psychological and mystical journey, the search for truth, the different layers of meaning. A powerful piece of work which leaves one reeling, but also thinking for hours afterwards.’
‘Binds philosophy and psychology together beautifully to uncover the fragility of perceived reality, and the delicate nature of human consciousness and identity . . . brought me back to my days in university studying Joyce and Eliot.’