by Eve Chase ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 27, 2017
A bewitching gothic tale of sisters and secrets.
Newlywed Jessie Tucker hopes a move to the countryside will help her find her footing with her teenage stepdaughter, Bella, who seems haunted by memories of her late mother, Mandy.
Yet the move to Applecote Manor, far from the bustle of London, instead raises more ghosts. Over 50 years ago, in the mid-1950s, 12-year-old Audrey Wilde simply disappeared from the grounds of Applecote, leaving her parents, Sybil and Perry, devastated and housebound. Five years after Audrey’s vanishing, Sybil’s glamorous, scandalous, and financially pinched sister-in-law, Bunny, takes a job in Marrakesh, so Sybil takes in her four nieces for the summer, a summer that will drive inexorably toward tragedy. Flora, the beguiling 17-year-old eldest sister, attracts the attentions of both Tom, an easygoing young man headed for a military career, and Harry, his wealthy, rakishly handsome friend. Outraged at the unfairness of her sister’s monopoly on male attention, second sister Pam spends the summer vying for Tom’s eye. Margot, who's 15, finds herself drawn to Harry, who gazes at her even as he courts Flora. Yet Margot also bears an uncanny resemblance to Audrey, which draws her into Sybil’s unsettling fantasies that Audrey will return. Young Dot, only 12, hovers, neglected by her lovesick sisters. Chase (Black Rabbit Hall, 2016) shifts between Margot’s and Bella’s investigations into Audrey’s disappearance, eerily escalating the tension as clues surface across time, including a cache of rain-smeared letters, a heart-shaped button, and broken spectacles. In the 21st-century sections, told in the third person from Jessie's perspective, the atmosphere thickens as a mysterious woman lurks on the edges of Applecote’s grounds, and Bella isolates herself in Audrey’s old bedroom, now riddled with relics of Mandy. In Margot’s first-person sections, the investigation leads to a shocking night of violence.
A bewitching gothic tale of sisters and secrets.Pub Date: July 27, 2017
ISBN: 978-0-399-17413-1
Page Count: 336
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: May 1, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2017
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by Elin Hilderbrand ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 14, 2014
A quick read to get you in the holiday mood, but not as strong as Hilderbrand’s best.
Hilderbrand leaves the beach for this Christmas novel—though it’s still set on her beloved Nantucket.
The whole island is looking forward to the annual Winter Street Inn Christmas party, except for the inn’s owner, Kelley Quinn, who's just discovered the hired Santa kissing his wife, Mitzi. Mitzi and Santa inform Kelley of their 13-year affair and Mitzi’s imminent departure from married life. Kelley, retreating to bed with smokes and booze, blasts Mitzi on Facebook and lists the inn for sale, its extravagant restoration having eaten through his once-sizable savings. Thankfully, he has grown children to help, though they have problems, too. Eldest son Patrick lives in Boston with his wife and kids, but the feds will soon be at the door to charge him with insider trading. Bartender Kevin, whose life was derailed by a bad woman, is now on track: He’s in love with Isabelle, the Winter Street Inn’s beautiful French manager. If only he can muster the courage to pop the question. And finally there’s Ava, a schoolteacher with the perfect boyfriend, except that he’s really not that into her. But Assistant Principal Scott is. Perhaps the only one who can tie up all these loose ends is Margaret Quinn, Kelley’s first wife and mother to the three kids, who sacrificed her family life in order to become the most famous journalist in America but whose arrival on Nantucket just may save the day. Increasingly, best-selling authors are producing Christmas novels, family dramas in which the Christmas Spirit prevails. They often seem like rushed marketing ploys, though occasionally they hold up to the author’s own standards. Hilderbrand’s falls somewhere in between; her skill at creating character is present, but the plot feels constrained and a little predictable.
A quick read to get you in the holiday mood, but not as strong as Hilderbrand’s best.Pub Date: Oct. 14, 2014
ISBN: 978-0-316-37611-2
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Little, Brown
Review Posted Online: Aug. 13, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2014
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by Susan Wiggs ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 13, 2019
A lovely read—entertaining, poignant, and meaningful.
After facing tragedy and betrayal in New York, an aspiring fashion designer escapes to her idyllic Pacific coast hometown to raise her best friend’s two young children and finds inspiration, redemption, and love in the unexpected journey.
Caroline Shelby always dreamed of leaving tiny Oysterville, Washington, and becoming a couturier. After years of toil, she finally has a big break only to discover a famous designer has stolen her launch line. When she accuses him, he blackballs her, so she’s already struggling when her best friend, Angelique, a renowned model from Haiti whose work visa has expired, shows up on her doorstep with her two biracial children, running from an abusive partner she won’t identify. When Angelique dies of a drug overdose, Caroline takes custody of the kids and flees back to her hometown. She reconnects with her sprawling family and with Will and Sierra Jensen, who were once her best friends, though their relationships have grown more complicated since Will and Sierra married. Caroline feels guilty that she didn’t realize Angelique was abused and tries to make a difference when she discovers that people she knows in Oysterville are also victims of domestic violence. She creates a support group that becomes a welcome source of professional assistance when some designs she works on for the kids garner local interest that grows regional, then national. Meanwhile, restless Sierra pursues her own dreams, leading to Will and Caroline’s exploring some unresolved feelings. Wiggs’ latest is part revenge fantasy and part romantic fairy tale, and while some details feel too smooth—how fortunate that every person in the circle has some helpful occupation that benefits Caroline's business—Caroline has a challenging road, and she rises to it with compassion and resilience. Timelines alternating among the present and past, both recent and long ago, add tension and depth to a complex narrative that touches on the abuse of power toward women and the extra-high stakes when the women involved are undocumented. Finally, Wiggs writes about the children’s race and immigration status with a soft touch that feels natural and easygoing but that might seem unrealistic to some readers.
A lovely read—entertaining, poignant, and meaningful.Pub Date: Aug. 13, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-06-242558-4
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 26, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2019
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