Reviews

An Unmarked Grave by Charles Todd

kathydavie's review

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4.0

Fourth in the Bess Crawford mystery series set in World War I and revolving around Bess Crawford, one of the nursing sisters helping on the front in the spring of 1918.

My Take
Dang, it's just not safe anywhere with Bess Crawford around! Fortunately, she's not one to sit back. Between rescuing and protecting and investigating on both sides of the Channel, all the influence that Bess' father and Simon have comes in very handy.

I do enjoy Todd's characters and the homeyness he creates, yes, even on a battlefield! Todd brings the time period to life in its manners, expectations, and dialog. There are some aspects to the time that I can appreciate. There are others that are simply too bizarre!

There are some loose bits in this particular story. Just how is the order that puts Bess in danger set up? Dr. Hicks claims he checked it out, but with all the paperwork that the army requires, I can't believe this move was set up this easily.

Wait just a minute...Captain Carson? I thought he was a major? And how does the Prince of Wales fit in with the worry about German spies. I do wish Todd hadn't put so many Julias in this story. What was the point of bringing in Mrs. Campbell's divorce? Yes, divorce is, omigod, the kiss of death socially, but for the little dribs that Todd drops I just don't see the point.

The Story
As if the horror of war isn't enough. As if these men aren't suffering enough, the Spanish influenza hits Europe and the battlefront. Doctors, nurses, soldiers, all are dying from this plague. But this flu is still not as insidious as the man who murders so many for his own purposes.

Her father has warned her of German spies and Bess is well aware that men will also murder for revenge. When those around Bess are murdered, even she begins to exercise a caution.

The Characters
Bess Crawford is a young woman who understands the responsibility of duty. Her father, Colonel Sahib, and her mother have raised Bess with the regiment and she is fully aware of the men who have passed through it. Her own honor demands that she aid the wounded, her nursing skill requires that she do so on the front lines. Sergeant-Major Simon Brandon was her father's batman and retired, technically, from the regiment when her father did. Technically.

Private Wilson is holding up under all of it. The influenza. The sorrow of having to bury all these promising young men. Yet, never did Bess believe he was depressed. Nor does his wife, Joyce Wilson, believe he would commit suicide.

Dr. Gaines is the doctor in charge of the convalescent clinic in Somerset. Captain Thomas Barclay is recovering there and is too eager to return to battle. Or play the role of bodyguard. Trelawney is one of the Colonel's men, assigned to drive Bess on her undercover mission. Lucky for Bess that Captain Grayson knows her so well.

Major Vincent Carson was a promising soldier. A man whom Colonel Sahib thought would one day lead the regiment. Colonel Prescott wrote the letter to his widow, Julia, informing her of his death. Sabrina Carson, the major's sister, married to please herself and not her family. It's quite possible that her husband's family took revenge for the slight. William Morton, her husband, has six other brothers in the war, some of whom could have done it. Hugh, David, Llewellyn, young Ross, and the twins with Ross Morton their father trying to run the farm on his own. With the tremendous numbers of men dying in this misled war, it's not that surprising that those idiots in charge finally realized that they shouldn't take every son in a family. It's too bad they didn't figure this out in this war!

The Cover and Title
The cover is Bess in her nursing uniform of a dark dress and the white apron, its straps criss-crossing in the back. Bess is standing in front of a window, her back to us, holding a paper, lost in thought.

The title is too accurate as Bess falls ill within hours of finding Major Carson who will find his final resting place in An Unmarked Grave.

valefimbres's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark mysterious reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

katie_samsock's review against another edition

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4.0

Bess seriously never has a second of down time. Maybe she should quit nursing and just take up being a detective. This one was fun but because of listening on audio I would get lost here and there. These mysteries might be better in hard copy. The narrator for this AMAZING! She does a ton of voices and very convincingly. I’ll definitely be looking her up.

mreach's review

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adventurous emotional mysterious tense medium-paced

5.0

aoosterwyk's review

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3.0

I love Bess. She got the opportunity to show off her skills in this book: driving, nursing, self-defense, URDU, etc. I kept confusing her with Maisie Dobbs.
The ending was again out of left field. I think I've commented before on some of the Todd's resolutions as a bit "deus ex machina". Not that I read them to be "smarter than a fifth grader", but I like it better when the dots do connect.

littletaiko's review

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3.0

The fourth book in the Bess Crawford series finds Bess still working as a nurse during WWI and smack in the middle of the Spanish influenza. Bess discovers the murdered body of a soldier who had previously served with her father. I enjoy the historical aspects of this series even though somehow the mysteries themselves don't quite sit right with me for some reason. The ending seemed rather out of the blue in this instance.

buffstbookslisa's review

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2.0

Despite good characters and settings, this book left me cold...all because it needed an editor! Holes in the plot made it completely incomprehensible! I guess I'll skip the next book in this series.

kdurham2's review

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3.0

Check out the full review at Kritters Ramblings

A historical fiction that took place during World War I in France and London, which is not my usual time and place to read about, so a departure from my norm which was a welcome reprieve. A story that is part of a series that centers around a nurse who ends up in the middle of a murder mystery. I loved reading one of my favorite genres combined with the historical fiction aspect.

tangerine7199's review

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2.0

I really wanted to like this series and this book but now I feel as if I have to simply break up with it. I was very interested in this book in particular because it dealt with the Spanish Flu, something I'm quite interested in. But the story was very lacking. What detective work was Bess doing? The detective work I did see was done by a secondary character, Simon and we never see the story from his eyes.

very disappointed.

woomom's review

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3.0

A good read. I was a little confused by all the different names and trying to keep up with their lives when they weren't major characters in the book. But appropriate for YA and an engaging book.