Jumat, 08 September 2017

Ebook Free , by Lynn Messina

Ebook Free , by Lynn Messina

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, by Lynn Messina

, by Lynn Messina


, by Lynn Messina


Ebook Free , by Lynn Messina

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, by Lynn Messina

Product details

File Size: 2329 KB

Print Length: 217 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1942218222

Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited

Publisher: Potatoworks Press (August 9, 2018)

Publication Date: August 9, 2018

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B07GBPZ2RR

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#5,759 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

The second in the series and the characters continue to entertain while solving a murder. Propriety and impropriety are weighed as the mystery is unraveled. The verbal parlays between the male and female leads are entertaining.

I have thoroughly enjoyed all of this author's books and this one certainly follows suit. I think it may be one of her best.

Beatrice is now in London and her family has latched onto a lie she told to further her last case, but it did much for a while - her invented and entirely fictitious thwarted lover. Now though things are too much- her aunt is convinced she must find the man despite his wife and children to find similar traits to finally marry off her unwanted niece. So as anyone would do she kills him - by filing an obituary on the fictional man. But while at the office dropping off the notice, a man drops dead at her feet. Bea recognizes the very distinctive knife in his back and sets out to investigate. But somehow Kesgrave has found her - he recognized the false obit for what it was and connected that with the paper's description of the missing female witness. They work together again to solve the dandy's murder and meet some interesting folks along the way. They also struggle to understand what exactly their relationship is and why they are compelled to solve these crimes.

This second entry in this new series is much stronger that the first. Gone are the Duke's long, pompous speeches and Aunt Vera's windy etiquette. Bea's inner monologues are now verbal monologues and dialogues. Then there's the romantic subplot. It's progressing but doesn't bloom quite yet. I absolutely love the slow burn romance. Authors- this is how it's done. There's lots of witty dialogue and a good waltz to build romantic tension. I did guess who the murder suspects were and I did figure out who but not why. Bea picks up on a detail I hadn't remembered. This seems a little far fetched for her to come up with but it made the story more interesting than what I had thought happened.I really like Bea and I can relate to her. When I was younger I would have been a wallflower not by choice like Bea. Now I'm older and more forthright. Bea has very low self-esteem from 20 years of being the poor relation and being told by the ton that she's not beautiful enough or wealthy enough to matter. As a single female she matters even less to the world. It's starting to REALLY get on her nerves and she leads a charge against the double standards of her world. I don't agree with all the decisions she makes or all the things she says out loud but I certainly thought them. She's going from Fanny Price to Lizzie Bennet quickly. Aunt Vera thinks Bea's mind is disordered from all the recent trauma and Bea is happy to let her aunt think that, yet the story hints at the fate of women who are believed to be mentally unbalanced.The Duke of Kesgrave, Damien, is growing on me. He knows when to play the Duke card and when to tease Bea about it. I do think he is messing with everyone by pretending to be so seriously boring. He finds amusement in watching people fawn all over him even when he's boring them. The Duke has noted Bea's criticisms and he likes needling her just to see her reaction. I do believe the Duke has feelings for Bea, whether or not he can or is willing to acknowledge them. Her feelings are clear by the end of the novel. The story ends on a rather sad and somber note.Bea's family provides comic relief with their absurd obsession with Mr. Davies. It's sad how much they want to get rid of her, yet it was a woman's duty to marry. That was what ladies like Bea and Flora were brought up for and Bea has failed her duty. Yet to obsess over a poor law clerk who Bea once loved, a man who is supposedly married with children is too awful for words. What is he supposed to do? Flora's thought is so laughably sad. I do not think Aunt Vera has any maternal feelings for Bea. Flora and Russell are funny and are now treating her like an older sister. Uncle Horace finally appears but he has little to say. I can't tell if he's hen pecked or as unfeeling as his wife. Certainly he doesn't care much for Bea. His one big scene is tinged with a melancholy feeling, at least from Bea's point-of-view.There aren't many new characters in this novel. Lord Fazeley sounds like an awful person. He didn't deserve to die and he's probably no worse than many of the other gentlemen of the ton. The Duke's description of Lord Fazeley is perfect and shows just how much the Duke is NOT the man Bea initially thought he was. Lord Fazeley was connected to a number of people, including Lady Abercrombie, an eccentric, wealthy widow. I didn't care for her very much for the same reasons Bea didn't. This lady is the type that only cares about men and keeping them wrapped around her finger. Her revelations are a bit creepy. Does she really want to make Bea her protege or is she motivated by keeping her own secrets? I think she's totally selfish and wants to make sure Bea keeps her mouth shut, even though it seems like the secret is probably out. Lord Duncan, the nephew of the murder victim, is young and a bit immature, like the young gentlemen we met in the first novel. I did not like the way Bea behaved towards him. She bullied him and that's not right. Yes he may be a murderer but that's not the way to get information.In the tradesmen class of people we have three additional suspects. Mr. Cornyn, publisher of Gothic novels and perhaps soon Lord Fazeley's memoir. He seems to be a timid man, unable to stand up to pressure yet his ego is pretty big. His assistant, Mr. Hill, reads all manuscripts. If there is a memoir, Mr. Hill would know about it. He is not a likable man. Miss Cornyn appears very late in the story. She is a kind and loving daughter but a bit silly. Perhaps she's been reading too many of Papa's gothic novels. Why would any of them have cause to murder Lord Fazeley?I love this new series. It reminds me of Marion Chesney but not as over the top. If you like the traditional Regency stories where the hero and heroine work together to solve a problem, then you will probably like this one. It's not exactly a romance YET but I am sure it will be!

In this second book in the Beatrice Hyde-Clare trilogy, we find bookish and brainy Bea bewildered when a debonair dandy falls at her feet. And promptly dies. With a knife in his back. Not just any knife, but a knife which she has most certainly seen somewhere before.Her search for clues takes her to the British Museum, where the Duke of Kesgrave is following the same investigative trail as Bea. Or is he just following Bea?The growing admiration and affection woven into the witty banter between Bea and the Duke is just adorable. In this book, we meet a few new eccentric characters, learn the fascinating origin of the word “fazed”, and finally hear “the three loveliest words in the English language” from the Duke’s own lips: “OUR next steps”.I spotted a couple of anachronistic words, but they weren’t terribly jarring. I think this novel’s pacing suffered a bit because of numerous flashbacks to the events in book one, which bogged down the flow of the new story line, but even so, it was delightful."Satisfied with how well Bea and her pet [lion cub] were getting along, her ladyship sat in an armchair upholstered in red silk and said, 'I name all my pets after my dead husband because I’m so accustomed to saying his name in a tone of fond exasperation and baffled tolerance. Do you think Henry would have minded?'”

I read this book through Kindle Unlimited. This story is a follow-up to A Brazen Curiosity, which I really enjoyed! Fortunately I didn't need to wait too long for the next installment about our intrepid heroine Beatrice, who just started coming out of her shell at age 26 in the last book and is now back in London for the season. Once again, she stumbles across another murder victim and uses her keen intelligence to solve the murder. The duke is back as her sidekick (or is she his?) and their banter continues. We don't hear the narrative from the duke's point of view, but he seems very engaged with Beatrice, who is trying to avoid developing a tendre for him as he is "beyond her touch". The romantic aspect is a cliffhanger which leaves me anxious for the next installment, which is hopefully coming soon.Lynn Messina's writing is excellent. Although her books are usually a relatively short read, I take as long to read them as those from other authors with a much higher page count because I don't want to miss a moment.

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