Another fire that changes lives in when Manderley burns to the ground in Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier (1938). Sorry for the spoiler but you should have read it already!Daphne du Maurier turns up as a character in Bloomsbury Girls by Natalie Jenner (2022), a historical novel set in a 1950 London bookstore, following three women navigating post-war societal expectations, career ambitions, and personal challenges. My review.My fourth link is Bloomsbury, where a murder takes place in Russell Square on page 4 in A Killing of Innocents by Deborah Crombie (2023). I love this series so was pleased to hear the author is hard at work on the 20th book about Kincaid/James. My review.A Case of Mice and Murder by Sally Smith (2025) is another mystery set in London, this one taking place around the turn of the 20th century at London’s Inner Temple. My review.Bloody Instructions by Sara Woods (1961) also has a legal setting in London. In this series launch, an attractive young barrister, Antony Maitland, is accused of murder. Dean Street Press has reissued this appealing series. My review.So my book journey took me from Antarctica to Baltimore, then to Cornwall, then stayed in London for the duration. There’s enough blood in both books to connect Wild Dark Shore to Bloody Instructions. Next month (June 6, 2026), we’ll start with a book by Stefan Zweig, The Post-Office Girl.
There are a few in your chain that I like the sound of - Bloody Instructions and Bloomsbury Girls in particular.
ReplyDeleteBloomsbury Girls is part of a series a lot of people really enjoyed; I've only read that one book of hers, but of course books about bookstores are an easy sell!
DeleteI love Rebecca - one of my favourite books! I also enjoyed A Case of Mice and Murder but haven't read anything else from your chain. The Sara Woods sounds tempting!
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to the second Mice and Murder book!
DeleteI enjoyed this for a few reasons. I have read Rebecca, and I love your link to the Bloomsbury girls. And then the next link to the murder in Russell Square caught my attention because the first two times I visited London, we stayed in Russell Square. I love the Bloomsbury vibe.
ReplyDeleteMy mother and I stayed in Russell Square a few years ago, wanting that Bloomsbury atmosphere, in a small hotel that had once belonged to John Millais. The vibe was delightful and there was a bookstore across the street, although the room was so small someone had to be on the bed if the other person was standing!
DeleteGood news on the Deborah Crombie and those Sara woods books - must make a note
ReplyDeleteYour library seems outstanding at getting new books quickly! Mine will usually order my requests if it doesn't own them but sometimes takes months to do it.
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