It's not necessary to have read the first book to enjoy the second, but it may increase your enjoyment as you get to know the characters.
Below is the blurb for the upcoming release "A Loveliness of Ladybirds". An excerpt will be available later this week, along with the usual character showcases.
Thank you for reading!
* * * * *
Ladybird, ladybird, fly away home…
Ten years ago, at ‘The Brindle Horse’ Hotel, Amarinda
Siddaway ran barefoot out of the fog, with a bloody knife in her hand and a
children’s rhyme on her lips. Tangled with rumors of lurid scandal, an illicit
love affair with a young man a dozen years her junior, and a missing corpse,
the mystery of Mrs. Siddaway seemed destined never to be solved. Tried for
murder and acquitted, the scarlet woman disappeared from the world just as
thoroughly as her alleged victim.
But was she truly innocent, or did she get away with murder?
Now, a decade later, a very similar crime has been committed,
once again at the same hotel. Can it be nothing more than simple coincidence
that several characters involved in the first incident are present at the scene
of the second? Another woman with a bloody weapon in her hand; another nursery
rhyme, and another missing dead man.
Some folk might think that old ghosts are to blame. Or is it
the ladybirds again?
A spinning weathervane on a boathouse roof, points in turn
to all four directions of the compass. And four letters, sealed with red wax,
stamped with the image of a ladybird, are out in the world, linking both crimes
with a curious, winding chain.
And there is only one man with the patience and wisdom to unwind
it. Only one man can connect the clues and stop that weathervane spinning.
Detective Inspector Deverell is not fond of coincidences or
the supernatural. But whatever is going on at ‘The Brindle Horse’, he’ll get to
the bottom of it. Fortunately, he has the eager, amateur sleuth and creator of
remarkable cakes, Miss Lucy Greenwood, to help him out.
* * * * *Get your copy from all online bookstores on July 5th.
(Image here, portrait by Tom Roberts 1888, public domain)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.