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A good Maisie Dobbs. In this book, we really see the rise of the nazi party and the world turning toward WWII. Maisie’s love life is picking up in a cool way. The mystery didn’t feel that compelling, but the different circumstances were interesting.
Jacqueline Winspear’s Maisie Dobbs series is the only series of mystery novels I’ve read in its entirety and that I make a point of keeping up with. I always enjoy them, although I don’t think they are top-notch novels. They are fun, but mostly I keep reading them because I want to find out what happens to the character, and I also find the process of reading through an entire series interesting. I like watching what happens to her over the years, the relationships that begin and end, the jobs that come and go, the ways her personality and experiences change. I like seeing just how much Winspear will develop her character over the course of one book and how she ends certain stories and begins new ones.
I also like seeing how Winspear deals with the changing historical context — the 1920s into the 1930s — and how that context shapes the mysteries Maisie attempts to solve. The earlier books focused on the lingering consequences of World War I, especially veterans suffering from war wounds, both physical and mental, that they couldn’t quite recover from. More recently, and especially in this latest book, Winspear is beginning to shift her focus onto the new conflict on its way, although World War I still plays an important role in the story. There is a heavy sense of foreboding in A Lesson in Secrets; the more perceptive characters are aware that the situation in Germany is looking more and more dangerous, and people are beginning to discuss Hitler and the Nazi party.
Read the rest of the review at Of Books and Bicycles.
I also like seeing how Winspear deals with the changing historical context — the 1920s into the 1930s — and how that context shapes the mysteries Maisie attempts to solve. The earlier books focused on the lingering consequences of World War I, especially veterans suffering from war wounds, both physical and mental, that they couldn’t quite recover from. More recently, and especially in this latest book, Winspear is beginning to shift her focus onto the new conflict on its way, although World War I still plays an important role in the story. There is a heavy sense of foreboding in A Lesson in Secrets; the more perceptive characters are aware that the situation in Germany is looking more and more dangerous, and people are beginning to discuss Hitler and the Nazi party.
Read the rest of the review at Of Books and Bicycles.
I did enjoy this Maisie Dobbs mystery set in Cambridge this time. It really did transport me back to the 1930s which was fascinating to listen to. It kept me hooked and surprised at the end as I thought I'd worked the mystery out.
Darn it...I'm almost caught up to all the books so far in this series...after the next one, I'll have to wait until new books are published.
Enjoyed the university setting in this one. The foreshadowing of what was to come with Nazi Germany and the next world war and how many ignored the signs was poignant.
Enjoyed the university setting in this one. The foreshadowing of what was to come with Nazi Germany and the next world war and how many ignored the signs was poignant.
Not as good as the last one, but it was really interesting to see how she is tying in the slow rise of the Nazi party, and other people keep dismissing it as not much of a threat. Not a perspective you hear much about in school when learning about WWII (at least in America).
Such a fascinating sense of terror and unease that is starting to seep in while reading these, with the buildup of the Nazi party in Germany and what it means for England.