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Devil May Care par Elizabeth Peters
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Devil May Care (original 1977; édition 2009)

par Elizabeth Peters (Auteur)

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6381036,952 (3.59)31
Ellie is young, rich, engaged and in love. These are the carefree days before marriage and new responsibility, and anything goes -- including house-sitting at eccentric Aunt Kate's palatial estate in Burton, Virginia. Ellie feels right at home here with the nearly invisible housekeepers and the plethora of pets, but she soon realizes that there are disturbing secrets about the local aristocracy buried in a dusty old book she has carried into the mansion. And her sudden interest in the past is attracting a slew of unwelcome guests -- some of them living and some, perhaps not. And the terrible vegeance that Ellie and her friends seem to have aroused -- now aimed at them -- surely cannot be...satanic.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:PepperWoodford
Titre:Devil May Care
Auteurs:Elizabeth Peters (Auteur)
Info:William Morrow (2009), Edition: Reprint, 352 pages
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Devil May Care par Elizabeth Peters (1977)

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Affichage de 1-5 de 10 (suivant | tout afficher)
A dumb girl with an endless supply of obnoxious relatives, friends, and neighbors (as well as the obligatory jerk fiancé) goes to housesit at her busybody aunt’s mansion. A series of ghostly apparitions and burglary attempts ensue for no logical reason.

This book features a silly, pointless, and incoherent plot populated with inane and irritating characters.

I am so relieved this is the last Elizabeth Peters book I have left to read. At least Peters’ managed to escape from the rut of ‘stupid girl fighting international smuggling in exotic locales’ plotlines she seemed to be trapped in for the last few books. Kudos to her for finally trying something slightly different! ( )
  missterrienation | Oct 21, 2023 |
One of my favorite comfort reads. A fun light plot (mystery with a tough of supernatural), quirky characters (not the protagonist, though, who is not much more than a viewpoint), both good and bad, snappy dialog, lots of cozy details and certain richly detailed and memorable depictions of places and people. Aunt Kate's "workroom" has lived with me as my ideal space: large, cluttered, filled with many hobbies started & -- not abandoned, but temporarily set aside .... ( )
  lquilter | Jan 10, 2020 |
Well, the good news is that this book was much better than I originally thought it would be! In my history of reading, never have I met a more obnoxious windbag than Henry Willoughby. Luckily, he turned out not to be the main protagonist of this story, otherwise I'm pretty sure I would have given on up on this. As soon as the point of view shifted solely to Ellie, I was much happier. Her upbeat attitude, and devil may care way of handling things, really pulled me in. Ellie was fun to follow, and this story ended up flying by once I settled in.

Now, the thing about Devil May Care is that it's a bit all over the place and doesn't care so much about backstory. See, Ellie is watching her grandmother Kate's large and rambling manor. How she got this manor, I am not certain. There's quite a few references to the fact that she has copious amounts of money though, so I suppose that's all the explanation that is needed. Unfortunately for Ellie, she comes upon a mysterious object, and lands smack dab in the middle of a ghostly adventure. Heavy emphasis on the mystery portion, lighter emphasis on the ghosts. The book tries valiantly to lay some groundwork around this mystery, but it doesn't quite get there. Which, sadly, knocks the tension and excitement down a bit.

I think what I really was a bit disappointed by, was that there wasn't more supernatural action in this story. Especially because the portions that mention the apparitions were wonderful! No, this book is, at its very core, a mystery story. There is a bit of humor, some romance, and a few quirky characters. All of that isn't able to mask the fact that this whole mystery just doesn't have all that much depth to it. The good news is that it makes Devil May Care a really easy read and, like I mentioned above, it flies by. It's just not as complex, or as supernatural, as I hoped it would be.

Points to Kate's home though for being utterly charming, as well as filled with all manner of pets. Every time the book mentioned her many cats, dogs, horses, and even her pet rat, I couldn't help but smile. I mean, after all, if you're going to live in a rambling manor, why not fill it with pets? I definitely would. ( )
  roses7184 | Feb 5, 2019 |
This was one of the best plots I’ve seen Peters put out yet. Usually, when she does the paranormal mystery plot it starts to become a little Scooby-dooish. You know, the ghost is captured then unmasked as actually being old man Ford the gardener. Anyway, Ellie is house sitting for her eccentric aunt Kate who’s out romping around the country. During the first night, Ellie stumbles upon a ghost that looks remarkably like Kate’s yard boy. Ellie is level-headed though and believes that there’s a logical explanation for her visitor. Soon though she finds herself being visited by a different spook every night and oddly enough all visitors are members of the six family members who founded the small town where her aunt lives. When news of this gets around to the six descendants of Ellie’s ghosts, they’re livid and believe she’s trying to disgrace them all. And things just keep getting worse when the yard boy, Don, moves in to protect her, the house starts being broken into, and the ghosts start becoming dangerous.

Overall, I really enjoyed this story. The characters are all well fleshed out and the plot was fun. ( )
1 voter Book_Minx | Jan 24, 2015 |
This is one of Elizabeth Peters' stand-alone novels, and one of two I found at a book sale and brought home with me. I really like EP's Jacqueline Kirby and Vicky Bliss series' so why not her stand-alones?

Devil May Care was a fun read; nothing taxing, or deep, but entertaining. The plot itself was a little...well...loose. The blurb is almost outright wrong, but:

Ellie is young, rich, engaged and in love. These are the carefree days before marriage and new responsibility, and anything goes -- including house-sitting at eccentric Aunt Kate's palatial estate in Burton, Virginia. Ellie feels right at home here with the nearly invisible housekeepers and the plethora of pets, but she soon realizes that there are disturbing secrets about the local aristocracy buried in a dusty old book she has carried into the mansion. And her sudden interest in the past is attracting a slew of unwelcome guests -- some of them living and some, perhaps not. And the terrible vegeance that Ellie and her friends seem to have aroused -- now aimed at them -- surely cannot be...satanic.

First, I don't think Ellie is rich, yet. No information about her past or present circumstances is given beyond that she's engaged and she's heir to her Aunt's fortune. Second, I'm pretty sure she's not in love; it's pretty clear from the first scene on the first page that the bloom is off that rose, so to speak.

The "dusty old book" is accurate - but it's the books mere presence that sparks everything - not any interest Ellie has in the past. Which is good, because she doesn't really show any interest in the past. I'm not actually sure she has an interest in anything.

Ellie is a likeable MC, but only in that way you meet someone and they just strike you as likeable and friendly. The reader never gets a chance to know Ellie at all, but she isn't a special snowflake or TSTL; she is independent, loves animals and gives lip when necessary.

No matter - the story was still a good time. Ms. Peters is excellent with dialogue and she's an ace at drawing characters with few words. Her setting was also equally well done; she adds a touch of gothic here and there, and I think this book might have been meant as a tip-of-the-hat to gothic ghost stories, but it just never quite got there.

I think Summer of the Dragon was a stronger story, but I'm not sorry I read this one at all - I'll pick it up now and again when I'm looking for something fun. ( )
  murderbydeath | Sep 20, 2014 |
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Elizabeth Petersauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Conlin, GraceNarrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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To the Washington ********
with thanks
for all the hours
of viewing pleasure
they have given me;
and especially
to the greatest of them all,
Number Nine
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Henry Danvers Willoughby was an extremely fortunate young man.
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"Oh," Ellie said, "well, yes. She does dislike quite a few people."
"For example?"
Ellie took a deep breath.
"Joe Namath and Dr. Joyce Brothers and Roger McGrath -- he's the head of the local schoolboard and he has been trying to censor the high-school library -- and All in the Family and TV commercials about deodorants -- she adores the cat-food commercials, of course -- and Howard Cosell, but I guess that isn't unusual."
"No."
-- Chapter 1, p.10
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Ellie is young, rich, engaged and in love. These are the carefree days before marriage and new responsibility, and anything goes -- including house-sitting at eccentric Aunt Kate's palatial estate in Burton, Virginia. Ellie feels right at home here with the nearly invisible housekeepers and the plethora of pets, but she soon realizes that there are disturbing secrets about the local aristocracy buried in a dusty old book she has carried into the mansion. And her sudden interest in the past is attracting a slew of unwelcome guests -- some of them living and some, perhaps not. And the terrible vegeance that Ellie and her friends seem to have aroused -- now aimed at them -- surely cannot be...satanic.

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