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Holly Newman

Auteur de The Heart's Companion

15 oeuvres 224 utilisateurs 4 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Holly Newman

The Heart's Companion (1990) 39 exemplaires
The Waylaid Heart (1990) 36 exemplaires
A Grand Gesture (1989) 34 exemplaires
Honor's Players (1988) 27 exemplaires
A Christmas Treasure (1992) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires
A Heart in Jeopardy (1991) 21 exemplaires
Reckless Hearts 3 exemplaires
Perchance To Dream (2013) 2 exemplaires
Rarer Than Gold (2021) 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

3.8 out of 5 Stars

While this is the fourth book of the series, it is my first and it is my first by this author. It was well-written and well-paced with the mystery and its clues dribbled out at just the right frequency. It turns out to have been quite a conspiracy – and you’ll wonder throughout the book if it is one perpetrator or many. You won’t have any trouble making the list of possible villains – it is just a matter of who you choose from that list. I enjoyed this book well enough that I have already purchased the first book in the series so I can begin reading from the beginning. Hopefully, I will have read them all before the next book's release.

One of the things I enjoyed about this book was the portrayal of the victim. Normally, I don’t want to know much about the victim other than hearing it in passing because I don’t want to become emotionally involved with them. However, that wasn’t the case with this story and I appreciated that – just this once. Our victim was a good man, a loving man, but he suffered from a mental health issue that once was called Multiple Personality Disorder. Yes, it truly is a real thing, but I’ve not normally seen the sufferer portrayed in a positive light. Usually, it is that some dastardly personality takes over and does dastardly things leaving the ‘normal’ personality to take the blame – for instance, Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde. While we never learn what caused Malcolm’s personality to split into multiples, there is enough story for you to make a good guess. Anyway, I came to admire the victim and was very sorry that he died.

As children Lilias, Malcolm, and Alastair spent their summers playing together in Scotland. Then, as they grew up, Lilias and Alastair fell in love and wanted to marry, but her father refused because Alastair wasn’t ‘Scottish’ enough and he made arrangements for Lilias to marry Malcolm. Lilias loved Malcolm – as a friend – and they had a long and reasonably happy marriage despite Malcolm’s mental issues. However, an event happened, and it made Malcolm feel it was unsafe for him to be around his family. Malcolm checked himself into a sanitorium where, after a few years, Lilias received word that Malcolm had killed himself. Then, imagine her surprise and dismay, when after two years of mourning she announces to the family that she is going to marry Alastair – only to be told she couldn’t do that because Malcolm wasn’t dead. OOPS! Then, he really was dead and Alastair was arrested for murder. OOPS!

I really enjoyed Sir James Branstoke and his wife Cecilia Branstoke. Their camaraderie, love, consideration, and working relationship were well-defined since it was the fourth book in the series and it was fun to see them work together. When they were asked to investigate Malcolm’s death to find the real killer and set Alastair free, they decided to use a two-pronged attack. Because Cecilia was still recovering from a serious case of influenza that had swept through their village – and she was expecting their first child – they determined to check Cecilia into the sanitorium. That would allow her to investigate from the inside while James investigated things from the outside. As the clues add up, we meet some interesting ladies within the sanitorium. They are bright, mischievous, full of energy, and the only reason they are in the sanitorium is because that is where they want to be. With those ladies involved, the villains never stand a chance.

I’m always looking for new and new-to-me authors and I may have found one to add to my go-to list. The plot is well-developed and the presentation is good. It was a fun read and I’ll definitely read the first book in the series to see how that goes. I hope it will have a tad more action and excitement than this one. Overall this was a nice read. I will say that I probably would have rated it higher had the book not pretty much ignored the Privilege of Peerage laws.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
BarbaraRogers | May 18, 2024 |
A missing lord, a punctilious official, and Napoleon’s return!

Newly weds Sir James Branstoke and his bride, Lady Cecilia have changed their honeymoon plans and travelled into Kent to Summerworth Park, an estate Sir James had recently purchased from his cousin.
Ensconced with their plans for refurbishment, they definitely didn’t expect to become involved in a missing, presumed dead, neighbor and acquaintance, Baron Aldrich. Nor did they foresee they’d be assisting the dead lord’s wife, Lady Elinor, with investigating the matter. Furthermore they had no notion they’d be falling down the proverbial rabbit-hole of dangerous coincidences and mis-directions.
Intrigue indeed! Havey-cavey happenings at the inn where they’re staying, near where Aldrich’s coach has fallen off a cliff! Cecelia and Elinor are nearly robbed by an intruder in the dead of night, possibly after a letter Elinor received from Aldrich. Then they’re accosted by a rigid, sanctimonious military person, one Captain Andrew Melville. There’s rumors of stolen gold and weapons, and at the center might be the secretive fanatical spymaster, Lord Candelstone. If it’s him, he’s as usual spinning threads on his intelligence web, leaving his agents dangerously isolated, without known support. Indeed using them carelessly, more as cannon fodder, as pawns on a chessboard, rather than valued operatives to be protected and supported where possible.
I gather James and Cecelia had a perilous run in with Candlestone’s operations in an earlier novel, a situation that nearly cost Cecilia her life. (I’m definitely going to read that as the hints about how they met sound intriguing.)
I enjoyed Cecilia and James’ relationship, their understandings about each other. I particularly appreciated Cecilia’s attitudes to those who would snub Lady Elinor because she comes from a mercantile family. How Cecelia dealt with such persons was satisfying.
The story appeared to start slowly, but once I fell into the writer’s rhythm, and the breadth of the intrigue, I found myself firmly entrenched in this Regency mystery set around 1815.

An Xpresso Book Tours ARC via NetGalley
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Signalé
eyes.2c | Sep 22, 2021 |
A great story with characters I just loved and plot that gave me butterflies. Catherine is sent to London to make her debut, with her Aunt (whom she doesn't know as her chaperone). Her Aunt thinks that she is a poor, country bumpkin (which isn't true). Catherine who wants no part in London society, sets out to disguise herself to be just who her Aunt thinks she is.
 
Signalé
sunnydrk | Sep 26, 2018 |
Jane is beautiful and rich, but a relative's mistreatment has left her jaded and emotionally closed off. She and her spinster aunt Elspeth retire to their relative's country estate to take care of two little boys. While there, the infamous Earl of Royce rescues first Jane from a thorn patch, then the boys from various misadventures. But when Jane's scheming relatives come to visit, the Earl feels moved to rescue her yet again. And as he and Jane work together to thwart others' dastardly plots, they each come to realize there is more to the other than expected.

I didn't much care for this: for someone supposedly capable Jane is terrible at handling children, constantly injures herself, and shrieks a great deal. The Earl was just too artificially crafted, from his oh-so-sad neglectful parents to to his oh-so-sad-but-totally-not-his-fault dead son. The schemes that threaten Jane are absurdly overly complicated, and worst of all, the villain of the piece confesses all in front of a number of disinterested witnesses, then conveniently gets taken out in a totally blameless way. It's all too calculated for my taste. Still, it's not poorly written and Newman shows at least a basic understanding of Regency England; if it sounds like that's damning with faint praise, then you don't yet realize how far above that sets this novel above most other novels out there today.
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Signalé
wealhtheowwylfing | Feb 29, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Membres
224
Popularité
#100,172
Évaluation
3.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
12

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