Scribbles & Wanderlust
  • Home
  • About
  • Clients and Representation
  • Book Reviews
    • Reviews 2012
    • Reviews 2013
    • Reviews 2014
    • Reviews 2015
    • Reviews 2016
    • Reviews 2017
    • Reviews 2018
    • Reviews 2019
    • Reviews 2020
    • Reviews 2021
    • Reviews 2022
    • Reviews 2023
    • Reviews 2024
    • Reviews 2025
  • Features
    • Deal Announcement
    • End of Year Book Survey
    • If We Were Having Coffee
    • This Season’s Rewind
  • Discover a New Read
    • Adult
    • Young Adult
    • Middle Grade
  • Tag: books

    • Top Ten Tuesday: Popular Authors I’ve Never Read

      Posted at 8:30 am by Laura, on March 4, 2014

      Top Ten Tuesday, a concept started by The Broke and the Bookish, is a themed post that connects bloggers to bloggers, bloggers to readers, and readers to readers. Every Tuesday has a special topic, and this Tuesday is Top Ten Popular Authors I’ve Never Read

      top ten tuesday

      The Oldies
      Ernest Hemmingway and Kurt Vonnegut

      The Brands
      Nora Roberts (that’ll change, though!), James Patterson, John Grisham, David Baldacci

      The Awarded
      Kate DiCamillo (that’ll change!) and Rainbow Rowell (that’ll change, too!)

      The Ones Advertised Everywhere 
      Marissa Meyer and Sara Shepherd

      Which authors have you never read? Apart than the ones I said were changing in the near future, do you think I should pick up a book by any of the other authors? Which book and why?

      Posted in books, Top Ten Tuesday | 18 Comments | Tagged authors, books, top ten tuesday
    • Book Review: “A Mad, Wicked Folly” by Sharon Biggs Waller

      Posted at 9:05 pm by Laura, on March 3, 2014

      A Mad, Wicked Folly by Sharon Biggs Waller 18079501

      Publisher: Viking
      Published: January 2014
      Genre: young adult, historical fiction

      ISBN: 9780670014682
      Goodreads: 3.95
      Rating: ★★★★★

      Welcome to the world of the fabulously wealthy in London, 1909, where dresses and houses are overwhelmingly opulent, social class means everything, and women are taught to be nothing more than wives and mothers. Into this world comes seventeen-year-old Victoria Darling, who wants only to be an artist—a nearly impossible dream for a girl.

      After Vicky poses nude for her illicit art class, she is expelled from her French finishing school. Shamed and scandalized, her parents try to marry her off to the wealthy Edmund Carrick-Humphrey. But Vicky has other things on her mind: her clandestine application to the Royal College of Art; her participation in the suffragette movement; and her growing attraction to a working-class boy who may be her muse—or may be the love of her life. As the world of debutante balls, corsets, and high society obligations closes in around her, Vicky must figure out: just how much is she willing to sacrifice to pursue her dreams?

      All Victoria Darling wants to do is get into the Royal College of Art and become a master artist. Normally that would be quite simple — but Vicky is restricted to the social and political rules of 1909 London. As a female, she cannot apply confidently, nor can she pay for tuition without seeking aid from a man. After posing nude for an art class, her reputation is sullied and her parents quickly try to patch it up with an engagement to Edmund Carrick-Humphrey, a wealthy and educated young man who could inherit Mr. Darling’s business. Vicky can hardly find solace with a wedding to plan and parents restricting her art, so when she decides to draw the suffragettes and gets wrapped up with the police, her world turns upside down. All it takes is one copper, police constable William Fletcher, to make her face her dreams.

      madwickedquote1

      In short, this book will make you feel all the feels.

      Passion. Vicky has a talent, she knows how to use it, she seeks to further her education in it, and she has a goal to become like a Pre-Raphaelite, remembered and adored for her artistic creativity. She wants to become an artist that inspires feeling in another person, just like Waterhouse’s painting A Mermaid does for her. To be inside a character’s thoughts like that — how she can find beauty in the smallest thing, how time stops for her when she has an artistic project, the way she can make art a part of every aspect of her life — is so thrilling. We all have something we are passionate about, and whether or not you’re an artist or enthusiast you’ll still feel that connection. Because it’s not just art — it’s women’s rights. Vicky has a base desire for equality from the start, a simple “Just because I’m a girl doesn’t mean I can’t do this” intuition. She’s frustrated with it, but is completely thrown when she meets passionate suffragettes. It shocks and inspires her that women will chain themselves to fences, will willingly go to prison, will starve themselves or endure force-feeding, just so a politician can hear their cry. Her artwork wraps up in their movement, and she with the women. Her growth and development in both is amazing.

      Anger. I love the Victorian era, and sometimes I believe I’m better suited in that time, but then a book like this comes along and reminds me that even when my great-grandmother was a little girl (nine years old in 1909) women did not have the rights we have today. And it astounds me that hundreds of thousands of women and male sympathizers would willingly get arrested and endure such torture. To me, these days, the faults of our history never make sense to me. Why would someone enslave another human being, deny the rights of another sex, deny the rights of another race, deny the rights of another religion, deny the rights of another sexual preference? It doesn’t make sense. We still have these issues today — but imagine the frustration to be in that party at that time. It angered me, seeing what these women dealt with — and what the anti-suffragettes did! And non-suffragette women! It wasn’t the book that angered me, but the history. And the author did a fantastic job of portraying the history!

      Sadness, betrayal. Will. Oh, Will. And Vicky with her father. And Vicky with her friends. And her mother’s history. Will’s family. Vicky’s good intentions but poor reception of those intentions. Edmund and his demands. I cannot say more without spoiling the book, but the author wonderfully wrote each character and their place in society. It was touching and beautiful.

      Love, happiness. I cannot tell you how many times I laughed, how many times I smiled and rolled my eyes along with Vicky during “deadly dull” house calls or “crushingly boring” dinner parties. Or when she was so wrapped up in her art and Will that social protocol is thrown out the window. Or how thrilling it was for Vicky and her suffragette friends Sophie and Lucy to work together and spread the truth about the prisons. Or how exciting the whole application process into the RCA was for Vicky. How she was able to teach her backward-thinking father to use the telephone, or learn to accept that cars were the new mode of transportation. How she was able to overcome her claustrophobia by using the Underground. How time could fly by and she only just realized she’d been holding Will’s hand. 

      There’s so much in this story that I can’t wait to continuously share with other readers. It’s a phenomenal fiction debut, and I’m looking forward to Sharon Biggs Waller’s future work!

      madwickedquote2

      Posted in books, Reviews 2014 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fiction, genre: historical fiction, genre: romance, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Advance Excitement at a Glance III

      Posted at 6:43 pm by Laura, on March 1, 2014

      arc posts

      This year, in an effort to blog more, to become more involved with the blogging community, and to keep up with the latest publications, I thought I’d create a monthly post about the ARCs I’ve received. These ARCs will be read and reviewed a month prior to the publishing date. The Advance Excitement at a Glance posts will feature one or two (or more, depending on what happens this year) books to look forward to, and it will motivate me to keep my to-read list on track.

      Last month, I read Panic and Savage Girl. For April, there are four ARCs in my queue, but I will feature two in this post and leave the other two as surprises! I’m excited about all of them and can’t wait to share my reviews with you.

      17978186Mimi Malloy, At Last! by Julia MacDonnell
      (Picador, April 8)

      …when an MRI reveals that Mimi’s brain is filled with black spots—areas of atrophy, her doctor says—it looks like she’s destined to spend her days in “one of those storage facilities for unwanted antiques.” Mimi knows her mind is (more or less) as sharp as ever, and she won’t go down without a fight. Yet as she prepares to take her stand, she stumbles upon an old pendant of her mother’s and, slowly, her memory starts to return…

      Divorced and retired Mimi learns to enjoy the quiet life, smoking an occasional cigarette and listening to jazz on the radio, but is constantly bombarded by her sisters’ nostalgia for childhood and children’s praises of assisted living. When she finds out about her medical condition, and discovers her mother’s pendant, she begins to remember bits of her repressed childhood, and finds love along the way.

      At laaaaast, my loooove…I met the author back in August and absolutely gushed over the title, chapter titles, premise of the story, Mimi, everything. She was so pleased that she and her editor offered to send me an ARC of the book, and I screamed in January when I found it on my doorstep (probably disturbed the neighbors with that one…). I cannot wait to meet Mimi and experience a second “coming of age” with her!

      17668473Prisoner of Night and Fog by Anne Blankman
      (Balzer + Bray, April 22)

      Uncle Dolf is none other than Adolf Hitler.
      And Gretchen follows his every command.

      Gretchen Müller grew up in National Socialist Party and knows nothing of the true hardships of the people Uncle Dolf so fiercely despises. But after she meets Daniel Cohen, a Jewish reporter, she is exposed to the dangers of the Nazi Party and the devastation and destruction it leaves behind.

      Balzer + Bray has some amazing books, and since I’m always in the mood for some great WWII fiction I have high hopes for this book!

      What books are you looking forward to in April? Got any ARCs you’d like to share excitement over?

      Posted in Advance Excitement, books | 0 Comments | Tagged advance excitement at a glance, advance reading copy, ARC, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: historical fiction, genre: young adult
    • Seth Fishman on “How to Write YA”

      Posted at 2:34 pm by Laura, on February 28, 2014

      Young Adult author Seth Fishman (The Well’s End, a superbly eerie, dystopian fantasy novel with viruses and quarantines) whips up a fantastic article for writers diving into the YA division. In “How to Write YA,” featured in Publishers Weekly, Fisherman makes six solid points that make me simultaneously nod professionally and jump up and down like an enthusiastic fan of YA (and want to high-five him multiple times for publishing this and finally make people realize…well, read on).

      1. Confront your failures.
      2. Don’t write down. “‘Young Adult’ does not mean stupid. It doesn’t mean ignorant.” *internally screams with joy* 
      3. Be timeless when timeless is called for.
      4. Remember what you felt, not what you remember.
      5. Be confident.
      6. Have a teenager help you edit. (Yes, this, it’s so important, especially for dialogue or dramatic moments!)

       

      Just read it like any good YA reader should! Fishman nails it.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, genre: young adult, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “Savage Girl” by Jean Zimmerman (ARC)

      Posted at 9:15 am by Laura, on February 27, 2014

      Savage Girl by Jean Zimmerman 17987214

      Publisher: Viking
      Publishing Date: March 6

      Genre: historical fiction, mystery
      ISBN: 9780670014859
      Goodreads: —
      Rating:  ★★★★

      Jean Zimmerman’s new novel tells of the dramatic events that transpire when an alluring, blazingly smart eighteen-year-old girl named Bronwyn, reputedly raised by wolves in the wilds of Nevada, is adopted in 1875 by the Delegates, an outlandishly wealthy Manhattan couple, and taken back East to be civilized and introduced into high society.

      Bronwyn hits the highly mannered world of Edith Wharton-era Manhattan like a bomb. A series of suitors, both young and old, find her irresistible, but the willful girl’s illicit lovers begin to turn up murdered.

      Zimmerman’s tale is narrated by the Delegate’s son, a Harvard anatomy student. The tormented, self-dramatizing Hugo Delegate speaks from a prison cell where he is prepared to take the fall for his beloved Savage Girl. This narrative—a love story and a mystery with a powerful sense of fable—is his confession.

      Hugo Delegate knows he’s in trouble. Whether or not it was Savage Girl — Bronwyn — who committed the murders or he, Hugo’s determined to free her and take the blame instead. He tells their story from the very beginning, in a windy, dusty city in Nevada where his wealthy family found and collected this feral young woman and brought her to New York City to be educated, trained, and prepared for her season. But somewhere within his story, Hugo blurs Bronwyn’s character, and begins to wonder if his love for her blinds him from her true nature, or if something — someone — more sinister is at work.

      While many historical novels stick to the historical facts of the day — politics, education, fashion, transportation, social expectations, belief systems, etc — Zimmerman embodies the language of the day in her story. From skeptical Harvard medical man to a drunkard wailing over his love, lust, and confusion, Zimmerman’s Hugo is a character that comes alive through the rich diction. I felt like I was on the train with his family, traveling across the country and entering high society and working with this “raised by wolves” young woman. Bronwyn is quite similar too — her growth is fascinating, her fierce independence and loyalty and brave nature colliding together to create this beautiful, believable character from the wilds. Feral children are not simply stories; they were real.

      When I first received this ARC, I assumed it would be like reading Catherine from Wuthering Heights plucked and dropped into Edith Wharton’s high society — her passions and wild-like manner considered animalistic and foreign. It’s nothing like that, and I’m glad. The mystery of the murders propelled the already intriguing plot (the character growth is enough to keep you reading), and it’s not until the exact last page that the truth is revealed. Zimmerman will keep you guessing, tossing around Hugo, Brownyn, and many other suspects back and forth. Who should you believe? The unreliable narrator? The wild woman?

      Oh, it’s just so wonderfully written. Transported in time! A time that many seem to skip across when discussing history, that age between the Civil War and the suffragettes — beautifully represented in this great book.

      Thank you, Viking and Goodreads, for providing this book for review!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2014 | 1 Comment | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: historical fiction, genre: mystery, goodreads, review
    • Top Ten Tuesday: REWIND! Childhood Favorites

      Posted at 8:30 am by Laura, on February 25, 2014

      Top Ten Tuesday, a concept started by The Broke and the Bookish, is a themed post that connects bloggers to bloggers, bloggers to readers, and readers to readers. Every Tuesday has a special topic, and this Tuesday is Top Ten Tuesday REWIND! Pick a Previous Topic. I’ve chosen “Childhood Favorites” for today!

      top ten tuesday

      I’m not sure where to start my childhood favorites (do I go all the way back to picture books?) but I can definitely say it will end with Jane Eyre at age 14. That was probably my defining coming-of-age/adulthood book.

      814677

      1. American Girl: Molly — She was WWII, which we hadn’t covered yet in 3rd grade, and she had glasses, which I predicted I’d need sooner or later because my parents are practically blind.

      2. Dear America: Across the Wide and Lonesome Prairie by Kristiana Gregory — Not sure what it was about this book, but I was definitely in a pioneer/wild west phase at some point. Might be due to the amount of devotion Mom had to Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.

      3. Sugar Snow by Laura Ingalls Wilder — The original books were good…but man, the illustrator for the picture books was phenomenal!

      129553

      4. Little House in the Highlands by Melissa Wiley — One whole summer I devoured the pre-Laura and post-Laura books. This was my favorite, set in Scotland!

      5. Madeline by Ludwig Bemelmans — I don’t know if it was a favorite when I was younger, but now when I see it I feel all nostalgic for the stories.

      6. Harry Potter series — Nana said I couldn’t have Thanksgiving mashed potatoes till I read the first chapter of the first book. I didn’t have mashed potatoes because I was too busy trying to finish the book.

      3633302

      7. Mr. Lincoln’s Whiskers by Karen B. Winnick — I distinctly remember the author visiting my school. Not that I didn’t think authors were real people, but it definitely blew my little 6-year-old mind that an author would actually visit the readers and sign their books.

      8. American Girl: Kit — She was from Cincinnati (where Mom grew up), lived during the Great Depression, and she was the first American Girl to have short hair. That was revolutionary then! I even went to the children’s museum in Cincinnati with Nana to meet Valerie Tripp (also the author of the Molly books).

      402013

      9. Angus, Thongs, and Full-Frontal Snogging — I was intrigued by the very English title, and entirely amused by the strange story. Georgia’s life was just so outrageously different from mine.

      10. Jane Eyre — And the birth of my Victorian England literary love began.

      What were some of your childhood favorites?

      Posted in books, Top Ten Tuesday | 2 Comments | Tagged books, genre: children, top ten tuesday
    • Book Review: “Panic” by Lauren Oliver (ARC)

      Posted at 11:15 am by Laura, on February 22, 2014

      Panic by Lauren Oliver Panic_HC_JKT_des4.indd

      Publisher: HarperCollins
      Publishing Date: March 4
      Genre: young adult, thriller, contemporary
      ISBN: 9780062014559
      Goodreads: —
      Rating: 
      ★★

      Panic began as so many things do in Carp, a dead-end town of 12,000 people in the middle of nowhere: because it was summer, and there was nothing else to do.

      Heather never thought she would compete in Panic, a legendary game played by graduating seniors, where the stakes are high and the payoff is even higher. She’d never thought of herself as fearless, the kind of person who would fight to stand out. But when she finds something, and someone, to fight for, she will discover that she is braver than she ever thought.

      Dodge has never been afraid of Panic. His secret will fuel him, and get him all the way through the game, he’s sure of it. But what he doesn’t know is that he’s not the only one with a secret. Everyone has something to play for.

      For Heather and Dodge, the game will bring new alliances, unexpected revelations, and the possibility of first love for each of them—and the knowledge that sometimes the very things we fear are those we need the most.

      Heather and Dodge, participants in a thrilling post-graduation game where the winner takes all, have different reasons for entering Panic. Heather jumps in to prove something to herself. Dodge, in a sense, plays for revenge. But Panic must be kept a secret from the adults and police of Carp — a small, poor town in the middle of nowhere — because Panic is the only chance any of the students have to escape and start a fresh, new life.

      First of all, this is not dystopian and it is not another Hunger Games. Yes, it sounds like THG, and yes it sounds dystopian, but this is a thriller contemporary novel through and through. The high school graduates of Carp of years past devised a daring, life-threatening game where the winner takes $50,000 — money raised from the school population, $1 donated from each student for every day of high school attendance — and escapes the awful, poor, messed up town. The winner can do whatever they want: go to college, get surgery, travel the world, pick up and leave, become athletes or actresses, you name it. These students are desperate, and they will put their lives on the line for that chance to escape.

      And that’s what fuels Panic, the desperation of the participants. Heather is deeply insecure, feels unloved and worthless, and she enters Panic blindly thinking she’ll catch the eye of her ex-boyfriend, when in reality she realizes she entered to prove something to herself and to the world. Every participants has a sad, angry, desperate story, and it fuels them throughout their frightening game. Jumping off tanks, crossing highways blindfolded…anything for the $67,000 pool for this year’s winner.

      So why 2 stars? While this was well-written, dirty and gritty, honest, and filled with intense emotion, it just wasn’t the book for me. I continued reading because I love Oliver’s work, but this particular book was not meant to be read by me. Maybe I’ve never felt this angry, scared, insecure, or desperate, or maybe I’ve had a sheltered upbringing, or maybe I just never interacted with people in these dire situations. Who knows? This is not a reflection of the book’s quality, but rather my enjoyment of the book.

      Thank you, Edelweiss and HarperCollins, for providing the book for review!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2014 | 2 Comments | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: contemporary, genre: fiction, genre: thriller, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “The Daring Ladies of Lowell” by Kate Alcott (ARC)

      Posted at 6:14 pm by Laura, on February 18, 2014

      The Daring Ladies of Lowell by Kate Alcott17974995

      Publisher: Doubleday
      Publishing Date: February 25
      Genre: historical fiction

      ISBN: 9780385536493
      Goodreads: —
      Rating: ★★★★

      Determined to forge her own destiny, Alice Barrow joins the legions of spirited young women better known as the Mill Girls. From dawn until dusk, these ladies work the looms, but the thrill of independence, change in their pockets, and friendships formed along the way mostly make the backbreaking labor worthwhile. In fact, Hiram Fiske, the steely-eyed titan of industry, has banked on that. But the working conditions are becoming increasingly dangerous and after one too many accidents, Alice finds herself unexpectedly acting as an emissary to address the factory workers’ mounting list of grievances.

      After traveling to the Fiske family’s Beacon Hill mansion, Alice enters a world she’s never even dared to dream about: exquisite silk gowns, sumptuous dinners, grand sitting parlors, and uniformed maids operating with an invisible efficiency. Of course, there’s also a chilliness in the air as Alice presents her case. But with her wide, intelligent eyes and rosy-hued cheeks, Alice manages to capture the attention of Hiram’s eldest son, the handsome and reserved Samuel Fiske.

      Their chemistry is undeniable, soon progressing from mutual respect and shy flirtation into an unforgettable romance. But when Alice’s best friend, Lovey, is found strangled in a field, Alice and Samuel are torn between loyalty to “their kind” and a chance for true love.

      Young Alice is determined to start a new life for herself by becoming a mill girl in a cotton factory, working with other independent young women on the dangerous looms. One accident after another sheds light on the dangers of factory work, and the list of grievances causes a stir among the workers. But when Alice’s dear friend Lovey is found strangled in a field, tensions rise and a trial threatens the balance of all of Lowell — and tests the bond between Alice and her employer’s forward-thinking son, Samuel.

      Once again, Alcott delivers a great new historical perspective on industry, law, and inter-class romance. With The Dressmaker, we saw a determined young maid desiring to become a seamstress and designer, all during the turmoil surrounding the court cases following the sinking of the Titanic. This novel, too, is based on fact: the murder of a factory girl and the rise of unions and strikes in industrial America. It was exciting to see how all aspects of the story — the wealth and opulence of the Fiske family, the spirited women in the factory boarding houses, the culture of a small town versus that of Boston, the law versus traditional prejudice — intertwined with one another, creating such rich detail and a vibrant story.

      Alice’s naïveté lends to her strong will and determination. From President Jackson’s visit onward, Alice was the voice of the workers without coming across as too strong or too weak. She spoke her mind respectfully, and never backed down. She’s quite an admirable character, and it’s easy to see how the mill girls loved her and how Samuel admired her despite her background. Social custom was a heavy topic, too. The Fiske family are of new money, and Grandmother is determined to make sure her son and grandchildren remember their origins, to look to reform and understand their employees’ grievances.

      Whenever I think of cotton mills and all the strikes, deaths, and horrors that came with the Industrial Revolution, I can’t help but be both frightened and disgusted with that bit of history. It makes reading fiction based on that difficult. And yet Alcott made each character’s hopes, voice, and personality shine so brilliantly that, for a moment and like Alice, I too forgot about the dreary hardships and absorbed the friendships, the passion for change, and the desire to break social code. Alcott is an excellent storyteller, and her next novel is definitely one to read.

      Thank you, Edelweiss and Doubleday, for providing this book for review!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2014 | 3 Comments | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fiction, genre: historical fiction, goodreads, review
    • Top Ten Tuesday: Reasons I Love Blogging/Reading

      Posted at 8:30 am by Laura, on February 18, 2014

      Top Ten Tuesday, a concept started by The Broke and the Bookish, is a themed post that connects bloggers to bloggers, bloggers to readers, and readers to readers. Every Tuesday has a special topic, and this Tuesday is Top Ten Reasons Why I Love Being a Blogger/Reader

      top ten tuesdayWhy I Love Being a Blogger

      1. With Quirk, I get to further rant or fangirl on topics discussed in class or at the bookstore. Like how you can spot excellent YA fantasy, or notice trends in the fractured fairy tale market.

      2. It’s easier to keep up with the latest hype when you’re blogging about it and actively seeking it.

      3. I get to talk to other bookworms around the world. What great conversations we have!

      4. It keeps my to-read list in line. Reviewing books motivates me to read and review more!

      5. Blogging has been a part of my life for a very long time, and it seems strange to just not “talk to strangers” on the internet.

      Why I Love Being a Reader

      1. I get to travel to faraway places I’ve never been, or revisit places I have been.

      2. There’s just something about experiencing another’s life, even fictional, that’s thrilling and exciting.

      3. I’m constantly learning. Especially with historical fiction — if it’s based on true events, I end up researching those true events. If it’s based on a classic, I find that classic. If it’s fantasy, I’m wowed by yet another entirely different world created by one person’s imagination.

      4. The universal sign of a reader — reading in public places, taking forever to find books in libraries/bookstores, carrying a book at all times — tends to also be a universal sign for a friend. It’s like a code for introverted people: this person is safe. Go discuss books.

      5. Being a reader means getting to talk about the books, and that’s the greatest.

      Posted in books, Top Ten Tuesday | 6 Comments | Tagged books, top ten tuesday
    • Book Review: “Tyringham Park” by Rosemary McLoughlin (ARC)

      Posted at 9:15 am by Laura, on February 11, 2014

      Tyringham Park by Rosemary McLoughlin 17801422

      Publisher: Atria Books
      Publishing Date: February 25
      Genre: historical fiction
      ISBN: 9781476733104
      Goodreads: —
      Rating: ★★★.5

      Charlotte Blackshaw is only eight years old when her little sister Victoria goes missing from the estate. Charlotte is left to struggle with her loss without any support from her hostile mother and menacing nanny. It is obvious to Charlotte that both of them wish she had been the one to go missing rather than pretty little Victoria.

      Charlotte finds comfort in the kindness of servants. With their help she seeks an escape from the burden of being the unattractive one left behind.

      Despite her mother’s opposition, she later reaches out for happiness and believes the past can no longer hurt her.

      But the mystery of Victoria’s disappearance continues to cast a long shadow over Tyringham Park – a mystery that may still have the power to destroy its world and the world of all those connected to it.

      Young Charlotte is building a bridge of sticks and mud when she’s informed her younger, beautiful sister Victoria is missing. From that day forward, her horrible nanny treats her even more poorly, her resentful mother scorns her, and her own self-worth fades. From her first hunt on the estate grounds, to her first art gallery showing in Dublin, to her exile in Australia as a doctor’s wife, Charlotte’s plagued by the disappearance of little Victoria. But as family, friends, and servants begin to piece together the events of that sad day, Charlotte strives to take matters into her own hands to prevent the truth from crumbling so many lives.

      Let’s first burst the bubble to all Downton Abbey fans and confirm that this is not like the show. It seems marketing teams try to entice readers by comparing any book with a large estate featuring upstairs-downstairs relationships set during WWI and WWII to that of the show. However, there’s something sparkly with the show, its good relationships between classes and care for other wealthy families and the villagers, that doesn’t quite ring true with the books advertised as such. In fact, this book (and many like it) may be more true to life than the show. Consider O’Brien and Barrow from the first season — hateful, conniving, self-centered — and set them upstairs as well as downstairs. Consider Edith, the unloved and unlucky of the three sisters. These characters are featured in the book, and it’s fascinating.

      Tyringham Park follows the family, the servants, and friends across three decades, from the Park to Dublin, London to Sydney. Victoria’s disappearance haunts 8-year-old Charlotte through adulthood. Charlotte’s decisions, mentality, emotional range, and personality are so affected by this childhood trauma that she, even into adulthood, sometimes acts like a child. Her growth is stunted, her self-esteem crushed, her world-view skewed. I wanted nothing but the best for poor Charlotte, but few people cared for her or believed in her. She was abused as a child before Victoria’s disappearance, and evidence of that shines through to the end. It’s heartbreaking.

      Shining moments of growth in Charlotte — moments that, if they lasted longer and if she were around more positive people, would have helped her overcome her psychological obstacles — really brought light to the story. Her moments riding horses, her first true praise in her self-worth. Her times painting with her tutor, Cormac, and the affirmation at a gallery that she is truly extraordinary. Her tenderness as a mother when she’s living in Australia. It’s so beautiful and bittersweet, because someone with great influence in her life crushes each joy.

      The mother, Lady Edwina Blackshaw, and the nanny, Dixon, are so beyond hateful it took all my willpower not to want to crush the review copy. That’s good news — excellent writing on McLoughlin’s part! Edwina is so self-centered, jealous, and wicked that she does not realize how incredibly dull and hurtful she truly is. There’s a moment when her husband, Waldron, shouts at her for her treatment of others — especially Charlotte — that for a moment you genuinely like his character (despite how oblivious he can be) and wish you could be shouting at her as well. Dixon, also self-centered, is vain, abusive, critical, and so incredibly strange in her view of her self-worth and perception. In one chapter, she talks about how beautiful she is, how she could snag any man she wants, how stunning her dresses are and how others will be so impressed by her. In the next, another character looks upon her and finds a plain, dull, over-dressed and desperate woman. Quite comical, actually.

      So many people’s lives unexpected change from Victoria’s disappearance. If Victoria was still around, Dixon could have kept her post as nanny, Charlotte wouldn’t have learned to paint, her brother Harcourt wouldn’t have introduced her to Lochlann, Charlotte wouldn’t have been exiled to Australia. And that’s not the end of it — periphery lives are changed as well: other servants in the household, a manageress at an Australian hotel, the people in Charlotte’s town, a medical family down the road from the Blackshaws’ townhouse. This saga (if that’s the appropriate word) was so incredibly fascinating that I couldn’t put it down.

      The writing was phenomenal, the storytelling wonderful. My one concern is that, unless the reader understands major psychological impacts of various aspects of disappearance and abuse, it can be difficult to understand and enjoy the various points of view. Even the horrid characters can be hard to enjoy reading, but I have to say it truly gave life to the book, gave a well-rounded interpretation of events from the good and the bad sorts of people. That must be where enjoyment of this book lies: an understanding in the complexities of humanity, and knowing one event can change the course of many lives forever.

      Thank you, Edelweiss, for providing this book from Atria Books for review!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2014 | 5 Comments | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fiction, genre: historical fiction, goodreads, review
    ← Older posts
    Newer posts →
    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
    • Search the Blog

    • Currently Reading

    • Book Review Rating Key

      ★★★ — It’s good
      ★★★★ — It’s great
      ★★★★★ — OMG LOVE!!!

    • Recent Posts

      • MSWL for 2026
      • Favorite Reads of 2025
      • Deal Announcement: Nina Moreno, YA Romance
      • Deal Announcement: Sharon Choe, YA Fantasy
      • Deal Announcement: Hanna R. Neier, MG Historical/Contemporary

Blog at WordPress.com.

Scribbles & Wanderlust
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Join 1,202 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...