
Anna Lee Huber began a new series last year when This Side of Murder was published. In Treacherous is the Night, the second novel featuring Verity Kent, the author hits her stride.
The reader learns early on that Verity was an agent in La Dame Blanche, a resistance and intelligence group, during WWI. This story has to do with events that had their origin in that time.
At the beginning of the novel, Verity, although not a believer, attends a seance with a friend who hopes to contact her brother. For those who don’t know, attending seances was common after the war. The medium appears to channel an agent with whom Verity worked during the war. From this point on, the novel is a hunt for clues to find Emilie and to prevent a tragedy. While the reader assumes that, since this is a series, Verity will survive, the author should be credited for creating suspense in her narrative.
There is a reason to read the books in order. SPOILER: This has to do with what happened to Verity’s husband, something the reader learns in the first novel. However, if the reader is willing to move forward, there is no reason that this novel cannot be read first.
I gave This Side of Murder three *** and am happy to give the new novel four. I enjoyed spending time with the main characters in this book and look forward to meeting up with Verity, Sidney and the rest of the crew in the future.
Thanks NetGalley and the publisher.
This picture book is for young children who are learning to recognize their numbers. With a simple rhyming text, toddlers are invited to move the squabbling 1 through 9. The background for the illustrations is outer space. This book is an easy way to reinforce number learning with young children.
Happy Veggies is a read-aloud that teaches children about the vegetables that grow in gardens. A delightful book for little ones who may think that foods appear by magic in the grocery store. Children will learn to recognize many common veggies, including carrots, corn, radishes, eggplants, etc. The illustrations are colorful and appealing. There is a reverence for nature expressed throughout by the author. A wonderful introduction to nature’s cycles and growing seasons.
I wish that this series had existed when I was growing up. Each short volume is introduced by a contemporary child and explains the period, the qualities of the paintings done at that time, the most well-known artists of the period and, in addition, shows a number of reproductions. There is a handy glossary in the back.
Little People, Big Dreams is a wonderful series that has encouraged young girls to dream of bright futures. The series has bravely taken Anne Frank as one of its subjects. This is a tough one because, of course, Anne does not live to be an adult who can achieve her dreams. Emphasis is placed on her diary and her wish to be a published author, something that did happen.
This book caught my eye when I was browsing in my local Barnes and Noble yesterday. The story of a couple, who fall in love and are lighthouse keepers with limited contact on the mainland, is an emotional read. How each copes with their inability to have a child, their relationship and the consequences of their choices makes for a good women’s fiction read. Some blurbs below:
The second book that caught my eye was this. I enjoyed this novel when I read it. Set during wartime, it traces the lives of a group of female characters who are left on the homefront. Their lives and relationships intersect with all of the pettiness and depth that make living in a village the experience that it is. The author was influenced by her own family stories in writing this novel. Blurbs below:
This excellent collection of mystery short fiction is published by Poisoned Pen Press and No Exit Press. It honors the tenth anniversary of CrimeFest, a festival that I would love to attend. Profits from the book benefit the Royal National Institute of Blind People.
This is the perfect gift book for riders and those who love horses. Some of you out there may well want to make this book a gift to yourself. Many disciplines including dressage, show jumping, polo, carriage driving, eventing, and others are described in this lush book. The importance of the bond between horse and rider is emphasized with the author describing horses as animals who are eager to please. The reader can dip in and out of the book, reading about the horse encounters they most love or they can learn about new disciplines and sports. The photographs throughout are stunning. Highly recommended for horse folk! Many thanks to NetGalley and Quarto for this one.