Showing posts with label Jacqueline Winspear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacqueline Winspear. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spell the Month in Books — March 2026
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spell the Month in Books — March 2026: Spell the Month in Books is a monthly meme hosted by Jana at Reviews from the Stacks . Each month one or two themes are suggested for the b...
Friday, April 21, 2023
Lesa's Book Critiques: WINNERS AND A HISTORICAL MYSTERY GIVEAWAY
Monday, March 20, 2023
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Maisie Dobbs, Fly Away, Pachinko, Outs...
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Maisie Dobbs, Fly Away, Pachinko, Outs...: Reported by Christy Former World War I nurse Maisie Dobbs decides to set up her own private investigation firm. Her first case seem...
Labels:
Achebe,
Auguist 2019,
Bookblog of the Bristol Library,
Christy,
Fly Away,
Hannah,
Jacqueline Winspear,
King,
Lee,
Maisie Dobbs,
Nevermore,
Pachinko,
The Outsider,
Things Fall Apart
Saturday, October 20, 2018
Saturdays With Kaye: In This Grave Hour by Jacqueline Winspear
In This Grave Hour by Jacqueline Winspear
The latest Maisie Dobbs
novel begins as Neville Chamberlain declares war with Germany and London starts
gearing up with air raid siren tests, allocation of gas masks, and night
blackouts. Maisie is hurrying to her friend’s house to hear the anticipated
announcement on the radio. War is, of course, unwelcome, as they all remember
the last one and everyone has suffered some sort of loss. But, as they remind
themselves, they came through it.
A phone call comes for Maisie from an acquaintance who wants to
give her some investigation business. The caller, Dr. Francesca Thomas, is
calling from inside Maisie’s flat, which she locked when she left.
The business has to do with some happenings during the last war
when Great Britain accepted over a quarter of a million Belgian refugees,
fleeing from German invasion. Most returned home after the war, but not all.
Several thousand stayed, married, took jobs, and some even changed their names.
Dr. Thomas herself is Belgian and tells Maisie that one of the former refugees
has been murdered, shot in the back of the head. Scotland Yard doesn’t have the
personnel to investigate his death and is treating it as a robbery gone wrong.
Maisie suspects that Francesca isn’t being completely open with her, especially
when another former Belgian is murdered. Maisie must follow the delicate
threads from the past that connect the men, hoping her friend Francesca isn’t
responsible for some of the death.
Meanwhile children are being evacuated from London in
anticipation of the bombing that happened in WWI and some need a place to stay.
One girl, brought to the family country estate, has arrived alone and is mute
and dark-skinned. No one knows who she is or who her people are. Maisie is
drawn to her, maybe dangerously so.
There is much detail here on wartime England and the people who
lived through that dark period. History buffs and Maisie fans will love this.
Reviewed by Kaye George, author
of Ella and the Ball in Once Upon
a Fact, for Suspense Magazine
Thursday, June 23, 2016
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Theodore Roosevelt, Hearts, Munich, Au...
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Theodore Roosevelt, Hearts, Munich, Au...: To kick off Nevermore this week, we welcomed back an old friend to our midst and eagerly listened to her review of David McCullough’s Mo...
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