Showing posts with label Nancy Atherton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Atherton. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2015

New Reviews: Atherton, Bates, Howard, Johnston, Jones, Knight, Magson, Moliner, Richmond

Here are nine reviews which have been added to the Euro Crime website today, five have appeared on the blog since last time, and four are completely new.

You can keep up to date with Euro Crime by following the blog and/or liking the Euro Crime Facebook page.

New Reviews


I review Nancy Atherton's Aunt Dimity and the Wishing Well, the nineteenth in the Aunt Dimity series set in the Cotswolds;

Ewa Sherman reviews Quentin Bates' Summerchill, in which we catch up with Icelandic police officer Gunna;

Susan White reviews Cold Revenge by Alex Howard, which is the second outing for DCI Hanlon;


Mark Bailey reviews Paul Johnston's Heads or Hearts: the return of Quint Dalrymple;







Geoff Jones reviews J Sydney Jones' Cold War thriller, Basic Law;

Laura Root reviews Disclaimer by Renee Knight, her debut;





Terry Halligan reviews Adrian Magson's Close Quarters, the second Marc Portman thriller;

Lynn Harvey reviews The Whispering City by Sara Moliner tr. Mara Faye Letham








and Michelle Peckham reviews What She Left by T R Richmond, also a debut. 



Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, along with releases by year.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Review: Aunt Dimity and the Wishing Well by Nancy Atherton

Aunt Dimity and the Wishing Well by Nancy Atherton (March 2015, Headline, ISBN: 147221630X)

I read the first book in the Aunt Dimity series, AUNT DIMITY'S DEATH, close to its release date in 1992. Like many, many, readers I was charmed by the book. The details of the plot are vague in my mind but I remember well the warm fuzzy feeling I got from reading it. The first book, introduced Lori Shepherd, a somewhat down on her luck young American woman who via a fairy tale-like story orchestrated from the grave by Aunt Dimity, ends up with a house and a husband in the small village of Finch in the Cotswolds.

Twenty years later and there are now twenty books in the series, with AUNT DIMITY AND THE WISHING WELL, being the nineteenth.

Lori and her lawyer husband Bill, a fellow American, have eight-year-old twins. Bill has his office in a house near the village green and Lori looks after their cottage and children, and helps out around the village. The book opens with the funeral of Finch's most reclusive resident Hector Huggins. As he appeared to have no family, the funeral is only attended by the villagers – giving Lori a chance to introduce them to new readers – until at the last moment a young Australian turns up: Jack MacBride, Mr Huggins' nephew.

Jack is staying in Finch whilst he puts his uncle's affairs in order and prepares his uncle's home, Ivy Cottage, for sale. Lori and Bree, a young New Zealander, offer their help in tidying up the garden. Jack makes a discovery in the back garden – a wishing well. When Lori's wish for it to stop raining comes true, the villagers are soon queueing up to make their own wish!

And when more wishes come true, Lori begins to feel that more than coincidence is at play. But how are these wishes coming true?

Lori's sounding-board is Aunt Dimity – who “speaks” to her via a special journal – Dimity's words appear on the page in response to Lori's spoken words. Dimity advises Lori that someone's going to get hurt if all these wishes come true and she should investigate…

I have to say that AUNT DIMITY AND THE WISHING WELL is not a crime novel as nothing criminal takes place but it is certainly a mystery novel as it's quite a puzzle as to how someone could orchestrate so many things and also the identity of that person. There is also some romance and the local gossip makes it feel like you're stepping into a long running soap opera. However you categorise it, as long as you're not expecting blood and gore or even a murder, then this should provide a few hours entertainment, with its gentle nature and its genteel environment and occupants.

Incidentally, the American author does well with her use of British English for the supporting cast, with only a few slip-ups eg bugs for insects.

I regret waiting twenty years to continue reading the series so I have been ordering some earlier books and I also, ahem, have a few on my tbr already.

First published in the US, Headline have now published some of the latest books. Plus they are all available as ebooks. Some of them may be in the 'Large Print' collection at your public library.