Paradise Gardens: Spiritual Inspiration and Earthly Expression
Book
Plants and gardens have always been a cornerstone of all major world religions and belief systems....
Roy Lancaster: Travels in China: A Plantsman's Paradise
Book
This book successfully combines a most enjoyable and detailed account of the well-known author's...
Victorian and Edwardian British Industrial Architecture
Book
By the end of Queen Victoria's reign, factories had become an inescapable part of the townscape,...
The Navy Lark
Full Cast, Jon Pertwee, Lawrie Wyman and Leslie Phillips
Book
All thirteen episodes from Series 14 of the classic BBC radio nautical comedy - plus a bonus show,...
Magician's End
Book
Discover the fate of the original black Magician, Pug, as prophecy becomes truth in the last book of...
The Incredible Spice Men: Todiwala and Singh
Book
Acclaimed chefs Tony Singh and Cyrus Todiwala are on a mission to wake Britain up to the versatility...
Black and British: An Untold Story
Book
A vital re-examination of a shared history, published to accompany the landmark BBC Two series. In...
The Unearthly (The Unearthly #1)
Book
The first time I was declared dead, I lost my past. The second time, I lost my humanity. Now I’m...
Railways & Recollections
Book
The 42 mile long line between Fort William and Mallaig is one of the greatest railway journeys in...
MelanieTheresa (997 KP) rated The Shape of Night in Books
Oct 11, 2019
"After an unspeakable tragedy in Boston, Ava Collette flees to a remote village in Maine, where she rents an old house named Brodie’s Watch, hoping to work on a cookbook inspired by New England cuisine that she’s been trying to finish for months. In that isolated seaside mansion, Ava finally feels at peace . . . until she glimpses the long-dead sea captain who still resides there.
Rumor has it that Captain Jeremiah Brodie has haunted the house for more than a century. One night, Ava confronts the apparition, who feels all too real, and who welcomes her into his world—and into his arms. Even as Ava questions her own sanity, she eagerly looks forward to the captain’s ghostly visits. But she soon learns that the house she loves comes with a terrible secret, a secret that those in the village don’t want to reveal: Every woman who has ever lived in Brodie’s Watch has also died there. Is the ghost of Captain Brodie responsible, or is a flesh-and-blood killer at work?"
The descriptive passages are terrific, bringing a long-dead ghost to life in vivid detail. I had no trouble at all picturing the house as it was in the Captain's time, or believing the scenarios in which Ava found herself. I could absolutely see Hannibal the cat as he helped to rid the old house of its mouse population. I could almost taste the wonderful flavors in the meals Ava was testing for her cookbook. And I could very nearly smell the sea.
As with many of the author's previous works, she kept me guessing right up until the big reveal - which I did not see coming. The Shape of Night is a well-written, fast-paced read with a satisfying conclusion, and I'd love to see more like this from this author. (But of course, keep writing those Rizzoli & Isles stories, too, please.) 😊