The author's second contemporary Gothic (The Thin Woman, 1984), overwrought and overlong, finds willful, gorgeous Tessa...

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DOWN THE GARDEN PATH

The author's second contemporary Gothic (The Thin Woman, 1984), overwrought and overlong, finds willful, gorgeous Tessa Fields, now 21, determined to find her true mother. Left in a basket on the doorstep of kindly Reverend and Mrs. Fields, her adoptive mother by now long-dead, Tessa's quest has honed in on the tiny village of Flaxby Meade and the ancestral home of the Tramwell sisters--Hyacinth and Primrose. Welcomed as a temporary houseguest, with some double-edged help from on-again, off-again boyfriend Harry Harkness, Tessa finds an odd assemblage--the gentle sisters, who are selling off treasures to keep Cloisters going, mostly to oily antique-dealer Clyde Beasley; an ex-burglar butler named Butler; Chantal, a gypsy housemaid with recent ties to Harry; village nurse and midwife Maude Krumpet and her adopted, quick-witted young Bertie. There are also the neighboring Grundys, mother and son, at whose house Tessa again meets art-expert Angus Hunt, her ex-employer. Eventually, it's Hunt who's found stabbed to death, and Godfrey Grundy is a second victim. But by now some readers will scarcely care. A lighthearted romp has become a bore; once-charming Tessa is a tiresome teen-ager at any age, and all the guests have stayed too long at the party.

Pub Date: Dec. 26, 1985

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 1985

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