My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review
Sir Edward Chenowyth was laid out in the middle of the orchard beneath a verdant canopy, with lace-like bits of sunlight breaking through the leaves casting a pattern on the ground below. At first blush one might assume the fellow had fallen asleep watching the wind play in the leaves above, were not his body contorted in a peculiar serpentine position. Or were his face not ripped beyond recognition.
As with any good Gothic, a dark and broody manor Penryth Hall resides in the Cornish countryside where the village citizens believe in curses and our intrepid heroine, Ruby, gets mixed up in a murder mystery told all from her point-of-view. Ruby's been to this Hall before and had made a promise to never return, her former bestfriend and intimate partner Tamsyn lives there, with her husband. After feeling betrayed by Tamsyn and turning her back on the life Ruby thought she'd live with her, Tamsyn married a baron. However, the fatherly figure, Mr. Owen, who has taken Ruby under his wing, has a trunk of books for Ruby to deliver to that area. After ignoring a letter from Tamsyn, begging Ruby to help her, Ruby decides this is fate telling her to check in on Tamsyn.
“Ruan, I need to know something.”
“What?”
“Are you or aren’t you a witch?”
After “meeting” Ruby, learning her trauma that she still holds from being a nurse in WWI (it's 1922), the murder mystery gets going fairly quickly. When Ruby agrees to deliver the books to a Mr. Kivell, she's in the Cornish countryside within a few chapters. There, fate seems to have her meeting Mr. Kivell, first name Ruan, in a fated way and within the first night of her checking in on her former friend Tamsyn, the baron is found murdered. Again, as with any good Gothic, the question of whether it is human or paranormal forces at work is swirled around. Ruan is the countryside's Pellar (a good witch), and with Ruby being an American, she instantly has friction with Ruan and everyone's thinking that it's the “Curse”. The family Tamsyn married into is said to be cursed by a witch because of the baron's ancestor falling in love with the wrong girl, and the baron's uncle and aunt were previously murdered, actually allowing him to inherit. Ruby doesn't have the best reputation, she was sent over from America by her family because of a scandal (she was caught with a married man) and this embittered her in ways. Then when the war started, she volunteered and was put on the Western Front and the death and destruction had her viewing life and priorities differently, along with falling in love with Tamsyn and to only feel betrayed by the decisions Tamsyn then made. So, when the townspeople think the curse has returned, they see Ruby as the possible witch who brought it back.
The woman pointed a finger at me. “She will destroy you. Take everything from you until you have returned to the earth from which you were born. Leave the morvoren-born behind, Pellar. She can bring you nothing but death.”
This has Ruby put in many almost death situations, Ruan has to save her from a stoning, enough dangerous situations that my American butt would have noped out very quickly but Ruby still has emotional ties to Tamsyn and she promised she'd stay to figure out the murder mystery to protect Tamsyn and Tamsyn's son. With Ruan being the Pellar and the most trusted in the area, this has them then working together to figure out who killed the baron. There's credible red-herrings all over the place and the middle did start to drag for me a little bit as one too many avenues started to appear on the way to solving the murder. There's also a little romance with the pushing tension turning into pull between Ruby and Ruan.
“I have a feeling about you. And I can’t say whether I hope or fear that I’m right.”
I read this with the mindset that it was a standalone and I think that wound up affecting my rating, this clearly is setting up to be a series, at least I hope so because the ending leaves numerous threads dangling. The focused on murder mystery here is solved but Ruby and Ruan's connection is obviously not done being explored and the epilogue seems to set-up Ruby to go on another adventure. The mystery was a bit too dragged out with one too many redherrings and their side stories, the edging in of paranormal was just about right with Ruan being a pellar and his Sookie Stackhouse ability, the underneath light romance was dashed enough in to call it a thread, and the main heroine Ruby had enough facets in her personality to draw me in and make me interested in her as a reader. I liked this, but with thinking the story was going to be contained in one book, wanted things to be more snappy. If you're willing to settle in for some meandering and can handle not all being explained, the setting and atmosphere in this was Gothic fun.
I find it so interesting how our expectations affect our reading experience; in this case, meaning that you thought it was a standalone, so the dangling threads are irksome; whereas when one knows in advance that it's the start of a trilogy or series, those dangling threads are exciting, as one is sure to get more answers in the next entry.
ReplyDeleteYes, exactly! I was about 60% through and I was really starting to think about pacing problems, if I knew this was going along more of, say, a Sherry Thomas Lady Sherlock series format, I do think I'd have been able to sink into it more, instead of tapping my watch.
DeleteI should say I haven't see anything saying this is going to be a series but the ending has me 99.99% sure. The romance didn't even end on HFN, but Lingering Treads!
It's weird, but I did get the idea that it was written as first-in-series from the first line of the blurb, where it says, "Armstrong introduces heroine Ruby Vaughn", but you are correct, there's no indication anywhere that's the case.
DeleteThe "introduces" is a big clue! I have the habit of not reading the blurb when I start a book, only when I first put it on my tbr. On me that I missed that :/
DeleteI mean, fair, but these days, when it's a series, or even just a trilogy, there's usually a tag somewhere--even if it's just the cover, or when looking on amazon or wherever else. There's nothing like that for this one.
DeleteWeird.
I find it so weird too! The only thing I can think of is they won't published the series if the first doesn't do well?
DeleteBut like I said, I think it would get rated better if readers go in knowing the story continues, is not contained to this one book.