A review by cossettereads
The Poppy and the Rose by Ashlee Cowles

3.0

In 1912, socialite and photographer Ava Knight is departing for the Titanic with her father, when she’s approached by a strange lady with a horrifying premonition, and an even stranger soldier with a glass eye who promises to make her wishes come true, as long as Ava becomes his spy. Torn between figuring out who to trust, and what to do, Ava embarks on an investigation of her own.

In 2010, Taylor Romano arrives for a summer journalism program at Oxford, with the secret agenda of solving a mystery of her own: who is the lady in the photograph with her father? It’s not a question she can ask her father, who passed away in the war a few years prior, or her mother, who is still grieving. She’s invited to tea by a mysterious benefactor, Mae, who promises to tell Taylor about her father. Against better judgment, Taylor decides to skip out on orientation for the journalism program, and go to tea instead. What she doesn’t realize is that Mae passed away the night before, leaving Taylor with a single clue -- A Titanic survivor by the name of Ava’s memoir, with the words “Find Will” scrawled in haste script on the inside. With this memoir as her only clue, Taylor must take a trip into the past to find out the link between Ava’s and her father’s, as well as Mae’s death.

The Poppy and The Rose is told in two narratives -- Ava’s, which mostly takes place in 1912, and Taylor’s, which takes place in modern day. I felt like the two narratives were weaved seamlessly, and loved reading Ava’s story, how Taylor reacted to it, and how it was all part of the bigger mystery. While I’m not usually much for mysteries and thrillers, I’m a sucker for historical fiction, and more so, the Titanic. I’ve always been fascinated by the history of the Titanic, and absolutely loved that aspect of this book. I found Ava’s story incredibly compelling -- much more so than I did Taylor’s, even if I found Ava to be a little unlikeable at times. The three overarching mysteries: The woman in the picture, Mae’s murder, the happenings on the Titanic, were all captivating, although I was mostly interested about the Titanic, and felt like the woman in the photograph, and Mae’s murder were more so background side plots. Even so, I found myself holding my breath along with both Ava and Taylor, hoping that everything would turn out alright in the end, and being shocked again and again at all the different twists and turns.

I found The Poppy and The Rose to be a quick read, and didn’t want to put it down.
Unfortunately, I felt like everything was a little rushed near the end. As I’m not British, I can’t speak from experience, but I felt like a lot of stereotypes were used, and it felt inauthentic. Overall, I found The Poppy and The Rose an easy read, and would recommend it to any lovers of The Titanic, or anyone looking for a nice mystery novel!