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The Broken Vow by Luisa A. Jones
Published: 22nd January 2024
Showing posts with label Historical Thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Historical Thriller. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 August 2023

REVIEW: Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier



Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
Genre: Gothic, Thriller, Suspense, Classics, Historical fiction
Read: 25th August 2023
First published: August 1938

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

'Rebecca is a masterpiece in which du Maurier pulls off several spectacular high-wire acts that many great writers wouldn't attempt' JIM CRACE, GUARDIAN

On a trip to the South of France, the shy heroine of Rebecca falls in love with Maxim de Winter, a handsome widower. Although his proposal comes as a surprise, she happily agrees to marry him. But as they arrive at her husband's home, Manderley, a change comes over Maxim, and the young bride is filled with dread. Friendless in the isolated mansion, she realises that she barely knows him. In every corner of every room is the phantom of his beautiful first wife, Rebecca, and the new Mrs de Winter walks in her shadow.

Ancient, beautiful Manderley, between the rose garden and the sea, is the county's showpiece. Rebecca made it so - even a year after her death, Rebecca's influence still rules there. How can Maxim de Winter's shy new bride ever fill her place or escape her vital shadow?

A shadow that grows longer and darker as the brief summer fades, until, in a moment of climatic revelations, it threatens to eclipse Manderley and its inhabitants completely...

Not since Jane Eyre has a heroine faced such difficulty with the other woman. An international bestseller that has never gone out of print, Rebecca is the haunting story of a young girl consumed by love and the struggle to find her identity.

'As a new generation of readers are introduced to the wicked housekeeper Mrs Danvers and learn Maxim de Winter's terrible secret, this chilling, suspenseful tale is as fresh and readable as it was when it was first written' DAILY TELEGRAPH


MY THOUGHTS:

"Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again..."

What a divine classic this is! After reading several novels recently set in Cornwall and channelling the late great Daphne du Maurier I felt I had to revisit Manderley again. And I was not disappointed. This is the second time I have read it and I've lost count of the number of times I have watched Alfred Hitchcock's rendition of it...and he does it wonderful justice. I rewatched it after finishing reading it and I recall several lines in the movie were word for word from the book.

So who is Rebecca? Or rather, who was Rebecca? REBECCA is the story of widower Max de Winter and his young bride who he met when she was serving as a companion to a wealthy and rather snobbish American woman, Edith Van Hopper, in Monte Carlo. Mrs Van Hopper was boorish and intent on an invitation to Manderley, a sprawling estate in the county of Cornwall known for miles around. It was rather amusing the way her companion and Max de Winter had hoodwinked her while she was laid up with influenza and they traipsed all about Monte Carlo. But the piece-de-resistance came when he announced that they were to be married and she was to continue on to New York without her companion.

And so became Mrs de Winter. And after honeymooning in Italy, the happy couple returned to greener shores and the new Mrs de Winter arrives at her new home on the arm of her husband Max. Manderley. It was all she had ever dreamed about. So beautiful, so grand and so big. The new Mrs de Winter is not used to such a lifestyle and soon finds herself lost in the sprawling structure.

Upon arrival, she meets the house staff headed up by the rather daunting Mrs Danvers. Polite she may be, her comments are cleverly barbed designed to injure. Danvers is not to be trusted, it is clear, though for reasons Mrs de Winter is not yet sure. She meets Max's sister Beatrice and her husband Giles as well as the estate manager Frank Crawley. All of whom are perfectly nice to her and bear no malice. Only Mrs Danvers seems to dislike her so. But why?

And then there is the silent whispers that tinker through the great halls of Manderley, and across the rose garden, and along the cove that runs into the sea. The shadows that are seen everywhere - in the morning room, in the west wing, everywhere she turns is the ghost of Rebecca, the late Mrs de Winter, Max's first wife. And Mrs Danvers is her greatest devotee, her ally. She ensures Rebecca's memory is kept alive even as the new Mrs de Winter tries to take her place she cannot command the same respect held for the late Mrs de Winter. 

Perhaps this is the reason why du Maurier omitted to name our main character - as she is only known as Mrs de Winter - for where ever she turned, she stood in the shadow of Rebecca.

"Rebecca, always Rebecca. Wherever I walked in Manderley, wherever I sat, even in my thought and in my dreams, I met Rebecca. I knew her figure now, the long slim legs, the small and narrow feet. Her shoulders broader than mine, the capable clever hands. Hands that could steer a boat, could hold a horse. Hands that arranged flowers, made the models of ships, and wrote ‘Max from Rebecca’ on the fly-leaf of a book. I knew her face too, small and oval, the clear white skin, the cloud of dark hair. I knew the scent she wore, I could guess her laughter and her smile. If I heard it, even among a thousand others, I should recognise her voice. Rebecca, always Rebecca. I should never be rid of Rebecca."

So who was the main character of this classic gothic tale? The new Mrs de Winter? Or Rebecca, whose ghost of a memory remained everywhere at Manderley? Or was the main character Manderley? The amount of times it is mentioned gives its position credence. And after all, it is the epicentre of the tale. One would think that Manderley was Rebecca's childhood home, the way Mrs Danvers defined it, particularly in the closing scenes. And yet it is described in detail by the new Mrs de Winter which, at the time of narration, many years have since passed as the opening chapter suggests...she dreamt she was at Manderley again and the way she drifted through its ruins as she herself were a ghost. When Manderley itself was now just a ghost of itself.

REBECCA is a classic tale of gothic proportions, so atmospheric and chilling on the pages as well as on the screen under Hitchcock's expert hand. Du Maurier was ahead of her time in her characterisation as well as her ability to thrill and chill readers. From the terrifying housekeeper to the crashing waves of the sea to the echoing halls of Manderley. Such a clever twist towards the end that unfolded in superb detail by du Maurier's deftly written hand. I never tire of this tale and I doubt I ever will. A true classic.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Daphne du Maurier, in full Dame Daphne du Maurier, married name Lady Daphne Browning, was born 13th May 1907 in London, England. She was an English novelist and playwright, daughter of actor-manager Sir Gerald du Maurier, best known for her novel Rebecca (1938).

Although she married Major Frederick Browning, she continued writing under her maiden name, and her subsequent novels became bestsellers, earning her enormous wealth and fame. Many have been successfully adapted into films, including the novels Rebecca, Frenchman's Creek, My Cousin Rachel, and Jamaica Inn, and the short stories The Birds and Don't Look Now/Not After Midnight. While Alfred Hitchcock's films based upon her novels proceeded to make her one of the best-known authors in the world, she enjoyed the life of a fairy princess in a mansion in Cornwall called Menabilly, which served as the model for Manderley in Rebecca.

Du Maurier’s first novel, The Loving Spirit (1931), was followed by many successful, usually romantic tales set on the wild coast of Cornwall, where she came to live. She also wrote historical fiction, several plays, and Vanishing Cornwall (1967), a travel guide. Her popular Rebecca was made into a motion picture in 1940. Du Maurier was made a Dame Commander in the Order of the British Empire in 1969. She published an autobiography, Growing Pains, in 1977; the collection The Rendezvous and Other Stories in 1980; and a literary reminiscence, The Rebecca Notebook and Other Memories, in 1981.

Daphne du Maurier died 19th April 1989, aged 81, in Cornwall.

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Sunday, 2 July 2023

REVIEW: Evil at Alardyce House by Heather Atkinson




Evil at Alardyce House (Alardyce House #4) by Heather Atkinson
Genre: Historical thriller, Gothic
Read: 1st July 2023
Published: 30th June 2023

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

The history of the Alardyce family is fraught with scandal and intrigue.

But after her eldest son Robert leaves the country, finally Amy Alardyce can enjoy some peace. Robert is wanted by the police for some unspeakable crimes, and his family hope he has run far enough and never looks back.

A decade after his disappearance, Robert has forged a successful life for himself, making his fortune from the diamond and gold mines of Africa. But when he sees a death notice in the newspaper, the call to go home to Scotland grows ever louder.

At Alardyce House, there are big changes too, and the fragile peace the family have enjoyed for so long is feeling more fragile than ever. And as the past comes back to haunt Amy and her children, will she have to finally accept that the curse of the Alardcye family can never be outrun…


MY THOUGHTS:

Can the curse of the Alardyce family be outrun...?

I'm saddened to have come to the end of this brilliant series but wow! What an ending. EVIL AT ALARDYCE HOUSE is the fourth, and I'm guessing the final book to what was essentially a trilogy to begin with. But having read the previous three, given where the third one "His Fatal Legacy" ended a fourth one was needed to bring the story full circle and to give closure to the Alardyce curse.

It's now 1910 - a new century, a new era - and twelve years have passed since Robert Alardyce fled his home after a violent confrontation with his mother and stepfather. He bought a passage to the first ship leaving port and headed to the South Americas where he bounced around before finding his feet and a new purpose. South Africa and the diamond mines. That's where he wanted to be, to make his fortune and drive out the dark whispers that tempt him. He makes contacts there and is as ruthless as ever as he gains control of the biggest diamond mine in the country. But after twelve years, he decides to head home to reclaim his wife and daughter whom have never been far from his thoughts.

When the door knocks at Alardyce House some two weeks later, everyone is shocked to see Robert standing there. If he was expecting forgiveness then he was to be disappointed. Twelve years may be a long time but people have long memories. But of all of them, his mother Amy is overjoyed to see her firstborn return home. His wife, Jane, is another matter. While he returned with the intention of reuniting with her, Jane has spent the past decade trying to move on from the torment he had put her through. The deep wounds have lasting scars as anger continues to burn inside her heart. He assures her that he is a changed man but the past looms heavily with its cloud of doubt. Past actions tell a different story. Is he sincere? She cannot be sure. Amy is quick to give him the benefit of the doubt but then she is his mother. And Robert has always cleverly disguised his motives in the past.

Alardyce House has always had its fair share of tragedy and it seems that isn't over. Although change has come, the family legacy must continue though some have trouble adjusting to their new roles. Amy has always been the matriarch that holds the family together but does she have the strength to continue now? Or is it time to pass the mantle over to the next generation?

I wasn't sure what to expect from this final installment of the Alardyce series when I began but I thoroughly enjoyed it. All our old favourites return, as well as some not-so favourite. There are a few surprises along the way and I even shed a few tears. Though the era has moved from Victorian times, there is still that element that runs over from the previous era. Certainly there are some Victorian traditions which Amy is quick to continue to recognise despite the changing times. 

If you like gritty, dark and sometimes chilling historical fiction then I thoroughly recommend this series! I do advise that they be read in order. And be warned, the first one is especially dark, graphic and very chilling.

Overall, EVIL AT ALARDYCE HOUSE is an addictive read that will keep you turning the pages until the very shocking end. The entire series has been just as addictive, just as absorbing and decidedly very chilling at times. But a brilliant read from start to finish. I've enjoyed my time with the Alardyces.

I would like to thank #HeatherAtkinson, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #EvilAtAlardyceHouse in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Heather Atkinson is the author of over fifty books – predominantly in the crime fiction genre.  Although Lancashire born and bred she now lives with her family, including twin teenage daughters and a cat called Mavis, on the beautiful west coast of Scotland. 

Heather's tastes in all things are eclectic, which extends to her writing. Although she primarily write crime books - especially gangland thrillers - she also write paranormal, historical romance and fantasy. She publishes on Amazon Kindle and some of her novels are available in paperback too. She has also signed my first traditional publishing contract with Boldwood Books for the gangland Gallowburn series, set in Glasgow. As well as the republication of the Alardyce Trilogy, beginning with "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House".

When she's not writing - which isn't very often - she enjoys reading, especially the Assassin's Creed novels, Agatha Christie, Oscar de Muriel and Edgar Allan Poe, among many others. Heather also enjoys walking, exercising and spending time with her family.

Social Media links:



PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Thursday, 23 March 2023

REVIEW: His Fatal Legacy by Heather Atkinson




His Fatal Legacy (The Alardyce series #3) by Heather Atkinson
Genre: Historical thriller, Victorian Era
Read: 21st March 2023
Published: 20th March 2023

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Edinburgh 1897

Amy Alardyce's once-perfect life is in tatters. Her eldest son, Robert, has come of age, become the master of his own home, and married his childhood love Jane.  But with maturity has come a terrible legacy, and the dark desires Robert inherited from his evil father Matthew, are fighting to get loose.

Whilst Jane is working hard to get her and Robert accepted into fashionable society, poor women are being hunted on the streets of Edinburgh, and Amy fears her son is to blame.  And once the infamous Inspector Murphy takes up the case, Amy has to face a stark choice - denounce her son as a monster or risk her own safety to protect him from the consequences of his lethal actions.


MY THOUGHTS:

"We were going to announce this at dinner," said Robert, wrapping an arm around Jane. "But I can't keep it in any longer. I'm very happy to announce that Jane is with child."

"Oh, that's wonderful," beamed Amy. "Congratulations," she said, kissing Jane's cheek before hugging her son.

"Yes, really wonderful news," said Henry, shaking his stepson's hand.

"With child?" repeated a confused Lydia. "What does that mean?"

"It means I'm going to have a baby," replied Jane.

Lydia clapped excitedly while her brothers still looked puzzled.

"For dinner?" said John.

"What a disturbing notion," commented Andrew.

"I have a baby growing inside my tummy," said Jane, pressing a hand to her abdomen.

"How did it get there?"

"There's a question for your parents," smiled Andrew, sipping his Scotch.

"Your brother put it there," Henry told John.

"Robert or Stephen?" he replied.

"Robert," he quickly replied while Andrew chuckled.

"How did he put it there?"

Henry's mouth opened and closed as he became increasingly flustered, Andrew grinning like a Cheshire cat.

"I'll tell you when you're older," was his reply.

"Why?"

"Because it's grown up knowledge."

"The curious minds of the young," smiled Andrew. "How about another magic trick, children?"

**************************************************************************

A dark heart or an honourable man...only one will prevail...

The third book in the Alardyce series has readers swept back to Victorian times as a darkness sweeps over Edinburgh once more, picking up soon after the end of the second thrilling installment "The Cursed Heir". While it can be read as a standalone, this is one series that can only be fully appreciated in all its ruthless glory from the very beginning. I highly recommend going back to "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House" first, which I found to be the most brutal of the three. It lays the foundations of the the second and third books, carrying a dark and atmospheric chill throughout. Think Jack the Ripper but on a greater scale...and what if Jack the Ripper had a son to take up his legacy?

Edinburgh 1897: Life has not always been kind to Amy Alardyce. But now she has found love with Henry, remarried and they have three beautiful children together. But Amy eldest child continues to worry her. Born from a liaison with an Alardyce footman when she was just just a teenager herself, Robert revealed his proclivities to be just like his father's before him thus prompting Amy and Henry to attempt to take matters into their own hands to prevent him from marrying his childhood sweetheart Jane. Alas, they were too late and the couple were wed.

Now a few short months later, Robert is proving to be a devoted husband, his love for Jane never wavering and as clear as night and day. And Jane continues to be blissfully oblivious to her husband's true nature, encompassed as she is in the throes of newlywed happiness. But how long can he keep his secret from her? He vows that she will never know...but how can one claim to know what the future holds?

When news reaches Henry and Amy that young maids have been attacked in alleyways late at night, they know at once that Robert is responsible and are dismayed. They had hoped that marriage might be the making of Robert but sadly too much of his father's blood runs through his veins. Henry confronts Robert who of course denies any knowledge of the attacks. But Henry has a proposition for his stepson...if he loves Jane and his mother enough.

And then Jane falls pregnant. Robert is excited, certainly, but he is also fearful. What if their child is a son? And he too shares his father's proclivities? What then?

Meanwhile, the Alardyces have been shunned by society for the past decade due to the shame brought on the family name by Henry's younger brother Edward and Amy's dalliance with their footman, of which Robert is the product. But with Robert and Jane's marriage, suddenly they have become accepted within society again, propelling Robert forward as master of his own destiny at the tender age of seventeen years. 

Suddenly there are murders in the Old Town and young women are being attacked. And this time, they do not go unnoticed. An Inspector Murphy is on the case and he will stop at nothing to uncover the truth behind these crimes. Is Robert a guilty man and has he gone too far this time? Is there any coming back from this? And will Amy protect her son till the end?

HIS FATAL LEGACY is something of a sad tale as Amy's story almost comes full circle and Matthew's legacy lives on in Robert. It also raises the question of nature vs nurture. I'm a firm believer in nurture but sometimes people really do bear the sins of their fathers before them through no fault of their own. This series belies the nature edict as is seen over the course of each book, though none have been as graphic or as brutal as that first one. But each are just as equally chilling. Though I did feel this one lacked some of what the previous two had, it was still dark and disturbing as we watched like voyeurs relishing our delight as Amy and Henry attempt to take back some control before it's too late. Robert is just as pathological and yet in this book we begin to see a different side to him and we find ourselves sympathising with him.

This book also differs in that it has a small police procedural side to it, though it is very minimal with the focus mainly on the Alardyces rather than the investigation. I mean, to us as the reader, there is no mystery. We know who did what...we just don't know whether the police will get there with what they've got. Or how long it will take them.

I am thoroughly enjoying this series and part of me doesn't want it to end. Although this had initially been a trilogy, a fourth book - "Evil at Alardyce House" - is to be published in July. And I can't wait!!

Overall, HIS FATAL LEGACY is a deliciously dark tale following on from the previous two books in the series that is atmospheric and chilling throughout. The entire series would make a brilliant TV series. But it's dark and it's chilling...who would be brave enough to undertake it? 

I would like to thank #HeatherAtkinson, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #HisFatalLegacy in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Heather Atkinson is the author of over fifty books – predominantly in the crime fiction genre.  Although Lancashire born and bred she now lives with her family, including twin teenage daughters and a cat called Mavis, on the beautiful west coast of Scotland. 

Heather's tastes in all things are eclectic, which extends to her writing. Although she primarily write crime books - especially gangland thrillers - she also write paranormal, historical romance and fantasy. She publishes on Amazon Kindle and some of her novels are available in paperback too. She has also signed my first traditional publishing contract with Boldwood Books for the gangland Gallowburn series, set in Glasgow. As well as the republication of the Alardyce Trilogy, beginning with "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House".

When she's not writing - which isn't very often - she enjoys reading, especially the Assassin's Creed novels, Agatha Christie, Oscar de Muriel and Edgar Allan Poe, among many others. Heather also enjoys walking, exercising and spending time with her family.

Social Media links:



PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Tuesday, 25 October 2022

REVIEW: The Cursed Heir by Heather Atkinson




The Cursed Heir (The Alardyce Trilogy #2) by Heather Atkinson
Genre: Historical thriller, Gothic, Victorian era
Read: 22nd October 2022
Published: 25th October 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Edinburgh 1896. At Alardyce House, the family are gathered to celebrate the engagement of the heir to the estate, Robert, to his childhood sweetheart. But what should be a precious memory for his mother Amy, is marred by darkness. For Robert’s biological father was a demon and a criminal, and now Robert is coming-of-age, disturbing reports are beginning to emerge about his behaviour.

Amy is torn between her love and loyalty to her son, her hope that she can save his soul, and her growing sense of dread that the streets of Edinburgh aren’t safe when Robert is in town. Meanwhile the increasing distance between Robert and his stepfather Henry threatens the peace of her loving marriage.

The Alardyce family is riven by secrets and scandal, but will this most cursed heir of all, be the one to ruin their reputation forever, or can the power of a mother’s love save them all?

If you love Emily Organ, Kate Saunders and Ann Granger, you’ll love The Cursed Heir. Discover bestselling author Heather Atkinson and you'll never look back...

Please note this book was previously published as Corruption of the Son.


MY THOUGHTS:

This is the second book in the Alardyce Trilogy and whilst it could suffice as a standalone I do highly recommend that the first book "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House" be read before this one. Only then can the reader fully appreciate the background as well as the lengths applied by some of those therein.

THE CURSED HEIR is a chilling follow-up to the first, even more disturbing, book following on the legacy it seems that Matthew has left behind. After escaping the torturous cellar with the death of Matthew and Edward then tried and hanged for his murder and that of several others, Amy married Henry and went on to have three children with him, making their home at Alardyce House. Now Robert has grown and is becoming a young man...but just what else is he becoming?

Edinburgh, 1896: It's Boxing Day and Amy Alardyce has awoken from the most horrific nightmare where she was bound and at the mercy of her torturers - Edward Alardyce, her cousin, and Matthew Crowle, the father of her illegitimate son Robert. It is as if she right back there in Edward's basement and the horror she experienced at their deviant hands. But she awakens to find it was just a dream...one that had seemed so real. 

But now she has a new problem on her hands. Yesterday, her beloved son Robert announced his engagement to Jane, the niece of Esther, the one time wife of Matthew and victim of his abuse. Even worse, she witnessed for herself the lascivious leer and malicious grin that swept over her son's face as he gazed upon one of their maids. It is a look she knows all too well. One she saw on Matthew's face, as well as Edward's as he tortured her. But this cannot be. Robert is her sweet beautiful son. But he also shares some of the more unpleasant and deviant traits of his dead father.

Amy confides in her husband Henry before sharing her fears with Jane's guardian and aunt, Esther and husband William, who have loved and cared for Jane for most of her life. Together they know they must do everything to stop the wedding from ever going ahead for fear that he will be the ruin of young Jane. This leads to separating the young couple by any means necessary to a dramatic chase to Gretna Green to stop the impending marriage from proceeding.

Despite his looming darkness, Amy is sure she can reach the kind the gentle side of her beloved son before it's too late. But is it already too late? She enlists the help of a local herbalist, Magda, who returns from the previous book whilst Henry secures someone loyal and able to keep a close eye over Robert. But is it enough?

Then when a young maid is found beaten and bloody in the snow one morning, Amy's hopes of ever reaching her son are dashed. But Robert denies any knowledge of the incident as we delve deeper and deeper into this dark and sinister tale. Is someone setting Robert up? Or is he truly his father's son?

THE CURSED HEIR is never more aptly titled as we watch Amy and Henry battle with the concept that their son Robert may have inherited his biological father's sinister and evil traits. As the reader, we are privy to each of the character's thoughts but even we question just how far the apple really does fall from the tree.

The story unfolds with plenty of twists and shocks along the way as some secrets are kept even from our view. And when they come, how will those at Alardyce House and beyond react? Amy sees and speaks to Matthew in her dreams and often nightmares where he promises she will join him soon. But are they just dreams? Or something far more sinister? Is Amy's life in danger?

THE CURSED HEIR picks up right where the first book ended but the opening pages are just like being thrust back to that very moment of horrifying torture at the hands of Matthew and Edward. I swear I was having flashbacks myself! This book isn't as horrific as the first but it is still equally chilling.

I enjoyed the part everyone played although there were a couple of loose ends in Amy's maid Hazel and Robert's friend Andrew that I hope will be tied up in the final installment to this dark trilogy. I think my favourites were Rush and Magda. Nothing got past those two and I do hope to see more of them to come.

The final curtain, when it fell, gave a glimpse into what is to come...and I cannot wait to see how THAT plays out!

Overall, an addictive, albeit disturbing, and very chilling gothic thriller that will keep you up late into the night turning the pages until the very end.

I would like to thank #HeatherAtkinson, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheCursedHeir in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Heather Atkinson is the author of over fifty books – predominantly in the crime fiction genre.  Although Lancashire born and bred she now lives with her family, including twin teenage daughters and a cat called Mavis, on the beautiful west coast of Scotland. 

Heather's tastes in all things are eclectic, which extends to her writing. Although she primarily write crime books - especially gangland thrillers - she also write paranormal, historical romance and fantasy. She publishes on Amazon Kindle and some of her novels are available in paperback too. She has also signed my first traditional publishing contract with Boldwood Books for the gangland Gallowburn series, set in Glasgow. As well as the republication of the Alardyce Trilogy, beginning with "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House".

When she's not writing - which isn't very often - she enjoys reading, especially the Assassin's Creed novels, Agatha Christie, Oscar de Muriel and Edgar Allan Poe, among many others. Heather also enjoys walking, exercising and spending time with her family.

Social Media links:



PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Saturday, 18 June 2022

REVIEW: The Missing Girls of Alardyce House by Heather Atkinson




The Missing Girls of Alardyce House (The Alardyce Trilogy #1) by Heather Atkinson
Genre: Historical fiction, Historical thriller, Gothic, Victoria Era
Read: 12th June 2022
Published: 15th June 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Edinburgh 1880. When Amy Osbourne’s parents are lost at sea, she is forced to leave her London home and is sent to live with her aunt and uncle at the opposite end of the country.

Alardyce House is depressing and dreary, her aunt haughty and cruel. Amy strikes up a friendship with her cousin Edward but his older brother Henry is just as conceited as his mother, and a mutual loathing develops between him and Amy. 

As her weeks of mourning pass, the realisation begins to dawn on Amy that her aunt has designs on her inheritance and the candidate she favours to be her niece’s husband fills Amy with horror. Struggling in this strange, unwelcoming environment, Amy begins to suspect that something isn’t right at Alardyce House. 

There are rumours below stairs of a monster on the loose, local women are being brutally attacked and her cousin Henry is the prime suspect. Alardyce House is full of dark secrets and Amy isn’t sure who she can trust…


MY THOUGHTS:

What a delightfully dark historical thriller THE MISSING GIRLS OF ALARDYCE HOUSE is. I really didn't know what to expect, having never read the author before, but the premise was incredibly intriguing. As soon as I started I had the sense of it being an atmospheric gothic tale in the wilds of Scotland. Ok, so Edinburgh is not exactly "the wild Highlands", but the setting of Alardyce House elicits a sense of isolation and malevolence with decidedly creepy undertones. Definitely atmospheric.

Beginning in 1878, Amy Osbourne is sent to live with her maternal uncle and his family at Alardyce House in Edinburgh, until she is of age or has found a husband, after the death of her parents at sea. She warms to her uncle Alfred but finds her aunt Lenora cold and haughty and their oldest son Henry as aloof as his mother. Alardyce House itself, whilst a commanding presence, is dreary and depressing and ruled by her aunt with an iron fist. Her only saving grace is her friendship with the youngest son Edward who is something of a black sheep to the family, with his predilections that he soon confides in Amy, and her maid Nettie. Both of whom warn her of the dangers of getting too close to Henry.

Soon after her arrival, her aunt Lenora decides to marry the girl off quickly so that she could be her husband's problem and no longer their's, and proceeds to host dinner parties in order to parade her for eligible bachelors as if she were a show pony. Amy doesn't appreciate being ambushed but realises she must play along and relent to her aunt's ministrations if not for the sake of peace. After all, she is still in mourning and cannot marry until after her period of mourning is over. When two possible suitors are inevitably found neither of them are deemed worthy and therefore a new plan must be hatched. And that is when aunt Lenora devises her most evil and cunning scheme.

However unbeknownst to the family Amy has had her eye caught by one of the footman, Matthew, who pursues her arduously. And it is here that Amy goes all Lady Chatterley for a time until their secret tryst is discovered. And aunt Lenora inflicts her worst. It is then that Amy's fate has been decided - she is to marry the oldest son and heir to the Alardyce estate, Henry. Amy is horrified. After all that she knows about the unsavoury character and his depraved proclivities, Henry is the last person she wishes to be wedded to. She couldn't think of anything worse. And so, along with Nettie and Edward as her allies, she devises and plan to escape.

Ten years later it's 1888 and Amy is now working as a governess in England having lost her fortune to her uncle of which he was the trustee. She has been highly recommended by a family who are relocating to France to a Esther Huntington who is in need of a governess for her niece Jane, of whom she is responsible for after the deaths of her dear sister and husband. The two women form a friendship almost immediately and Jane flourishes under Amy's guiding hand. Life is good for Amy now and she is happy once again. And then Esther's husband returns...and Amy couldn't be more shocked. How could this be? Will he reveal her true identity? Or has she unwittingly put herself and all she loves at risk?

Amy thought life had improved since her escape from Alardyce House but now she finds that her past has caught up with her and nothing is at all what she had thought. And the lovely family she had been working for turns out to be anything but. But try and try as she might, she cannot escape the clutches that terrorise her now. Is this to be her fate? Is she being punished for her sins? She has but one friend she can run to, if she can make her escape, but is he really?

THE MISSING GIRLS OF ALARDYCE HOUSE, while a little far-fetched at times, was a thoroughly entertaining historical thriller that was atmospheric, sinister and very very dark. The horrors within was something akin to a present day thriller but then again, this was set in the times of Jack the Ripper who was just as depraved as the malevolent characters penned here and even gained a mention in passing as if to emphasise the fact. It most definitely is not for the faint-hearted with some of the descriptions and elements of torture together with the brief albeit vivid depiction of violence.

The characters were very well portrayed, drawn with just enough detail for ambiguity or purpose. Amy was nothing at all like women of the Victorian era should behave, which did give her an air of unlikeability. She was promiscuous from an early age and didn't hide the fact believing it to be quite normal behaviour. That being said it had tarnished her reputation lending her aunt to conniving up ways to rid herself of what she saw as a problem whilst gaining something out of it in the process. Hoisting up her skirts and going all Lady Chatterley with a footman was a decidedly stupid move but Amy showed no real care at the time, that one had to wonder if she brought a lot of her misfortune on herself. But then, the violence that was to come further into the story, she did not. However, Amy certainly didn't do herself any favours with her carry on in her early days at Alardyce House. As for the other stalwart characters in the tale, each had their parts to play and they did so very well.

The twist, when it came, was stealthily done and an even bigger one towards the end turned everything on its head! I was fist-pumping the air because it was as I suspected in the very beginning and then forgot about it...until I didn't. I wasn't surprised but I was still shocked particularly at the lengths of depravity.

A clever well-plotted story that had be intrigued from the start, THE MISSING GIRLS OF ALARDYCE HOUSE is a thoroughly enjoyable gothic tale of secrets and deception that is both atmospheric and deliciously dark. It is also depraved and disturbing. But very addictive. With a fantastically chilling ending that clearly paves the way for the second book.

This is a very difficult book to review because there is so much I want to say but can't! I do recommend you read it yourself. It may be your thing, it may not be. But it is an addictive ride just the same.

I would like to thank #HeatherAtkinson, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheMissingGirlsOfAlardyceHouse in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Heather Atkinson is the author of over fifty books – predominantly in the crime fiction genre.  Although Lancashire born and bred she now lives with her family, including twin teenage daughters and a cat called Mavis, on the beautiful west coast of Scotland. 

Heather's tastes in all things are eclectic, which extends to her writing. Although she primarily write crime books - especially gangland thrillers - she also write paranormal, historical romance and fantasy. She publishes on Amazon Kindle and some of her novels are available in paperback too. She has also signed my first traditional publishing contract with Boldwood Books for the gangland Gallowburn series, set in Glasgow. As well as the republication of the Alardyce Trilogy, beginning with "The Missing Girls of Alardyce House".

When she's not writing - which isn't very often - she enjoys reading, especially the Assassin's Creed novels, Agatha Christie, Oscar de Muriel and Edgar Allan Poe, among many others. Heather also enjoys walking, exercising and spending time with her family.

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