Enola Holmes and the Black Barouche

Enola Holmes and the Black Barouche

2021 • 261 pages

Ratings8

Average rating3.9

15

This is the seventh in Nancy Springer's Enola Holmes series, but the first that I've read. I watched and enjoyed the Netflix show before I even knew there were Enola Holmes books, so I was delighted at the chance to take part in the blog tour for this one. This book reads just fine as a stand-alone – there's enough of an intro at the beginning to give you a sense of the backstory, and I didn't feel like I'd missed out on anything vital to a proper understanding of this story.

Enola is a headstrong, independent delight of a protagonist, and often a trial to her older brother Sherlock (in no small part because she seems to often be one step ahead of him!). She shares his investigative mindset, and when Miss Letitia Glover comes to ask for Sherlock's assistance in finding out what has happened to her twin sister Felicity, it is Enola who springs to her aid.

Felicity was married to the Earl of Dunhench. Letitia has been informed, apparently after the fact, that her sister has died unexpectedly and that her body has already been cremated. As cremation wasn't the usual practice in Victorian times, Letitia feels that something doesn't ring true. She also feels certain that she would know if her twin were dead. When Enola learns that the Earl's previous wife also allegedly died suddenly and was also cremated, nothing will do but that she go to the Earl's estate, undercover, to try to find out what really happened and what the arrival of a mysterious black barouche had to do with Felicity's disappearance.

As she unravels the clues, Enola proves herself quite capable at a number of things – quick thinking, disguise, surviving what appear to be most dire circumstances. She doesn't let the constraints that society places on women keep her from doing what she feels needs to be done. When Enola asks for her assistance in unveiling the truth of what happened to Felicity, Letitia also shows herself willing to move beyond societal expectations in order to make things right. They were both wonderfully written.

The mystery wasn't incredibly complicated, but that doesn't make it any less of an engaging read. The historical details, the setting, the characters both good and bad, the dialogue – all combine to form a literary treat.

Now I've got to go read the rest of the series.

Disclaimer: I received an advance reader copy of this book from Netgalley and St. Martin's Press – Wednesday Books. All opinions here are mine, and I don't say nice things about books that I don't actually like.

September 6, 2021Report this review