Showing posts with label Mary Stewart Reading Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Stewart Reading Week. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Book Review: Thornyhold by Mary Stewart

Title: Thornyhold
Author: Mary Stewart
Source: Library

Goodreads Summary:

This old-fashioned gothic romance is as good as they get. When Gilly's witch aunt leaves Thornyhold to her, a house in the middle of the woods, Gilly finds that she has inherited far more than she realized. Along with the house comes a cat, a still room filled with herbs (and a missing recipe book), an attic chamber with carrier pigeons (who have secret messages), and an attractive neighbor whose young son offers the sacred and unique blessing of friendship. But Thornyhold possesses far more than even these simple offerings. The place itself seems to convoke otherworldly gifts as well: Gilly cultivates the abilities to heal and to foresee the future once she makes Thornyhold her home. (For those fans of Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series, there is a Geilis the witch in this book, too.)


My thoughts:

Perfectly charming from start to finish. Ok, maybe not from the very start, with all of poor young Geillis' troubled childhood moments. With a cold and stern mother, parents that hold her at arm's length, and worse, refuse her the love she seeks from having pets, the only brightness is her mom's cousin of the same name. When she visits, Gilly finally feels loved and important, and ramble around the countryside together, while Gilly learns the names of flora and fauna.

Years later, Cousin Geillis passes away, leaving her younger cousin her beloved home, Thornyhold. Thornyhold sounds enchanting, located in the country, and Gilly is excited to be able to have something of her own. She moves in right away, and finds the woman who had been watching over her house, Agnes Trapp to be helpful in that irritating way. Is she a help or a hindrance? Are her motives pure, or does she have an ulterior motive for helping Gilly? Gilly also makes friends with a young neighbor, William, who visits with his sick ferret, in hopes that Gilly can fill her cousin's shoes as healer.

The reader is teased with the idea of country witches, spells, midnight rituals and out of body experiences. There is danger lurking somewhere out there, for people and for the animals that Gilly has taken in, pigeons, Hodge the cat, and a stray dog that Gilly hears at night. But where is the danger coming from, and why?

I loved this book. I loved the bits of magic and romance, the great old estate in the country, and Gilly. It is a perfect read for when you want something a little mysterious and supernatural, without going overboard, and might be best when the day is drizzly and you have a cup of tea readily at hand.



Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Mary Stewart Week - Nine Coaches Waiting


Mary Stewart Reading Week is hosted by Gudrun's Tights
I was so very excited to see a Mary Stewart Reading Week! I thought I was maybe the only person left in the world who read her books. I love their feel, the gothic cozy mystery, set somewhere fabulous. I love them especially on rainy nights, with a cup of tea or a glass of red wine, but I will read them anytime, especially when I am looking for a comfort read.


Title: Nine Coaches Waiting  
Author: Mary Stewart
Source: My personal collection

Goodreads Summary:

The opulence and history surrounding Linda Martin at Chateâu Valmy are all part of some wondrous, ecstatic dream. But there is a palpable terror crouching in the shadows. And then an accident that is no accident nearly kills the young English nanny's innocent, nine-year-old charge.
This is not "chance" -- this is something planned...and deadly.

My thoughts:

There is usually a house in Mary Stewart's books - a big old neglected house, or a house of secrets, or a shining mansion. In Nine Coaches waiting, the house is a house of secrets, and young nanny Linda has a secret of her own.  

Linda Martin is a young nanny, her charge Philippe, the future heir.  He lives with his aunt and uncle, overbearing and cold relatives. He is starving for affection and love, and when Linda begins work, they soon form a close relationship. She is protective of him, and truly cares about his health and well being. Then he is shot at while they are out hiking the property together. She begins to think of all the "accidents" that surround Philippe, and begins to suspect the worst. She is intimidated by Philippe's Uncle Leo and Aunt Heloise. The two potential love interests for Linda, because there is always a touch of flirtation and romance in a Stewart book, are possible heroes, but they are surrounded in shadow, and the reader only knows what Linda knows.

So who to trust? Where to turn? The story and suspense build until the final pages, where the action reaches a crescendo and the reader still is unsure of where and who are safe, until the very end. 

I loved this book, it is one of my absolute favorites of Stewart's. The atmosphere, the Frenchness, the mystery, the old glamour of decades past, the romance of it all, I eagerly succumb to, and I read it at least every year. 

 And lucky me, it qualifies for the European Reading Challenge!