logo
SuperSummary Logo
Plot Summary

Storm Catchers

Tim Bowler
Guide cover placeholder

Storm Catchers

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 1999

Plot Summary

First published in 2001, Storm Catchers is a young-adult mystery-thriller novel by English author Tim Bowler. Set over the course of a four-day rainstorm in a coastal English town, the story follows Ella Parnell, a thirteen-year-old girl who is kidnapped by an unknown intruder. With a ransom note left by her captor, Ella’s fifteen-year-old brother, Fin is determined to find his sister, as he feels responsible for leaving Ella alone with their three-year-old brother, Sammy, at the time she was kidnapped. As Fin and Sammy find clues that lead to Ella’s whereabouts, dark family secrets are unearthed as a dangerous showdown at a lighthouse takes place. Storm Catchers won several awards, including the South Lanarkshire Book Award, the Stockton Libraries Award, the Stockport Schools’ Book Award, and others. The novel has been called “suspenseful and scary” by The Sunday Times, and “full of atmosphere, energy and emotional shrapnel” by The Guardian.

Narrated in alternating perspectives between siblings Ella, Fin, and Sammy Parnell, the story begins on a stormy night in the coastal English village of Polvellan. Thirteen-year-old Ella Parnell has been afraid of her haunting abode ever since she was a toddler. Fin, Ella’s fifteen-year-old brother, leaves Ella alone with their three-year-old brother, Sammy, in order to see his friend Billy Meade’s new computer. While left alone, a stranger breaks into the Parnell home. Ella hears the intruder and acting quickly, hides Sammy in a cupboard. Ella is kidnapped and taken to a seaside cave. Ella’s parents, Peter and Susan, are terrified when they return home to find their children missing. Ella’s kidnapper leaves a ransom note that reads: “Tell a soul and she’ll be dead. We’ll be in touch.” Sammy is found in the cupboard. Shortly after, the kidnapper telephones the Parnell family, telling them to have Fin bring $200,000 to the old Pengrig Lighthouse, an abandoned lookout structure on the verge of collapsing into the sea. The kidnap stuns Ella’s family, in particular, Fin, who feels guilty for leaving Ella unsupervised at the time she was abducted. Susan tries to remain calm so as not to upset Sammy, but she is secretly distraught. Meanwhile, Sammy has the ability to see and communicate with invisible beings. Throughout the story, Sammy talks to himself and his ghostly imaginary friend, and constantly runs off to the bluffs to “catch the storm.”

Desperate to find his sister, Fin uses a dowsing book to build a pendulum. He does this by holding a gold ring and a lock of Ella’s golden hair over a map. Strangely, the pendulum only responds to Sam’s touch, again leading the family to the ominous Pengrig lighthouse on the edge of the cliffs. When the Parnells realize Ella is being held near the lighthouse, they row their boat to the largest of the Fury islands. The storm intensifies. The Parnells dock, hear a gunshot, and rush into the cave where the sound came from. When they enter the cave, they find both Ella and a boy lying against a rock. They discover Ella is the one remaining alive. Ella explains that her kidnapper was so guilty over what he had done that he decided to end his own life and shot himself.



The kidnapper was Ricky Prescott, the illegitimate lovechild of Peter Parnell and his mistress, Lindy. In a lengthy admission, Peter admits that he had an affair long ago with one of his young grocery store employees, which yielded a secret child. After Ricky was born, Lindy had a second child, Imogen, from a different father. Years before the kidnapping of Ella, Peter accidentally frightened Imogen while sketching a portrait by the bluffs near the lighthouse, accidentally prompting her towards the edge. Moments later, Imogen fell off the cliff and died. Ricky blamed Peter for his sister’s death his entire life, and as an act of vengeance, decided to kidnap Ella ten years later and hold her for ransom. The ghostly voice that Sammy hears throughout the story is that of Imogen; Sammy’s desire to “catch the storm” is the exact phrase used by Imogen before falling off the cliff. When Ricky heard Sam use the same words as Imogen, Ricky took it as an instruction to kill Ella as a means of exacting revenge on Peter.

When this dark family secret comes to light, Peter confesses to being blackmailed for years. Not by Ricky, but by a local vagrant named Kelman, who retrieved photographic evidence of Peter’s affair with Lindy. Kelman threatened to expose Peter’s secret if he didn’t continue to pay him off. Susan is devastated by this news, as are Ella and Fin when they find out about Peter’s terrible secret. Although Ella survives, her family is changed forever. In the end, Ricky survives his self-inflicted gunshot wound, incurring severe brain damage as a result. Sammy stops hearing the voice of Imogen and begins hearing a peaceful voice instead. As the novel ends, the old Pengrig lighthouse collapses into the sea. Ella kisses Fin on the cheek and they walk back home towards Polvellan.

Tim Bowler has written more than twenty children and young-adult novels, including Midget, Dragon Rock, Shadows, Starseeker, Apocalypse, Frozen Fire, Bloodchild, Buried Thunder, Sea of Whispers, Night Runner, Game Changer, and the Blade series. His 1997 novel, River Boy was awarded the Carnegie Medal from the Library Association. He has been called “the master of the psychological thriller” by The Sunday Telegraph, and “one of the truly individual voices in British teen fiction” by The Independent.