The idyllic village of Harper's Green seems picture-perfect, with its Norman church, stately manor house and full complement of local busybodies. But as the prolific Holt ( Daughter of Deceit ) illustrates in this haphazard romantic mystery set in turn-of-the-century England, nasty secrets wait to be uncovered. Frederica Hammond, a spunky and expressive teenager who comes to Harper's Green to live with her Aunt Sophie, forms close bonds with Rachel Grey, a timid orphan, and Tamarisk St. Aubyns, daughter of the local gentry. Frederica immediately falls for Tamarisk's aloof and patronizing brother Crispin, who, at 20, already has a troubled past and a mysterious devotion to his two retired nannies, one of whom is quite mad. Enter debonair Gaston Marchmont, allegedly an heir to French and Scottish estates, who seduces Rachel, weds Tamarisk and terrorizes the elderly nannies before being murdered. The novel quickly unravels when Frederica and Tamarisk embark on a series of implausible adventures en route to a remote Pacific island rendezvous with Frederica's father, who abandoned her at birth. Pallid characters, insipid dialogue and bizarre plotting combine to result in a less than memorable effort.
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This story was all over the place
I've had this book on my shelf for a really long time - early 90's. I had started to read it but lost interest. I finally decided to just read it now and move it off my shelf whether I finished it or not but the hardcover book was heavy and hurt my hands to hold. I got this kindle version to help but this is a horrible copy. They obviously used a computer program to copy the text and didn't check it to make sure it copied okay. It's a mess with random numbers and letters scattered throughout and some sections of the story are repeated twice. Most of the time the letter “I” was typed as a number one and in some places parts of words were missing so I had to pull out the physical book to see what it was supposed to say. The story isn't that good but once I started I had to know how it ended. The secret is obvious early on but I had to know how it was revealed.
I filed this one in the round bin.