Saturday, August 30, 2025

Murder On a Scottish Island by Lydia Travers (Lady Poppy Proudfoot Book Two)

 

Publication Date:
September 8, 2025

Genre:  
Cozy Mysteries/Historical Mysteries


Length:   
 364 pages

Series: 

Lady Poppy Proudfoot 

Book description courtesy of Goodreads

A dead body and a missing sapphire pendant? Lady Poppy Proudfoot is on the case!

Scotland, 1924: When Lady Poppy Proudfoot is invited to her friend’s hotel on the Isle of Skye, she is looking forward to a holiday. But all thoughts of relaxing vanish when she discovers the body of a strangled woman in a church.

The police believe the widow’s death was a robbery gone wrong, as a pendant was stolen from the scene. But Poppy is sure it’s murder. Ignoring the police’s warnings to keep her nose out, she enlists her friend Inspector MacKenzie, and her loyal Labrador, Major, to unpick the case.

Poppy suspects one of the hotel’s guests knows more about the murder than they are willing to admit. Could it be Miss Buccleugh, the avid button collector? Or the travelling guru, who conveniently disappeared just after the murder? Or was it Mr Henderson, so desperate for money he was driven to murder?

When Poppy sees the victim’s sapphire pendant on the neck of another guest, she is convinced the killer is targeting widows in the hotel, and luring them in with jewellery. But to prove her theory, she will have to offer herself up as bait. It’s risky, but her only way of catching the killer… Can Poppy con a con-man, and make it out alive? Or will she be the next wealthy widow on the killer’s list?


My Thoughts

I read book one and this one is an ARC from NetGalley. I like getting in on a new series and reading in order so I wanted to read this one before it came out and review it. It is a cute cozy and continues the story of the characters from book one, Lady Poppy and her love interest, Inspector MacKenzie. Poppy thinks she is going to just have a lovely, relaxing time in Scotland on the Isle of Skye but of course she gets tangled up in another murder mystery. This time it is one of the hotel's long standing guests who seemingly has no past to warrant anyone harming her. When Poppy finds her body she is determined to get to the bottom of things.

The plot is not terribly intricate or detailed but the author does the usual job of creating eccentric characters who seem shady and maybe probable suspects. Lady Poppy pokes her nose where it doesn't belong and MacKenzie chides her involvement. As she delves deeper into the mystery she wonders if she is being targeted as well as she is a widow and it seems the killer is preying on them in particular. Along with her dog, Major she investigates while putting herself in danger sometimes. Her status allows her into places and situations she might not normally go without the title of "Lady." 

In order to create a sense of time and place, the author adds some touches that speak to the 1920's. I liked learning the historical facts she inserted although sometimes in these cozies it feels a bit forced....like they are adding it just to prove the book is historical and not modern day. That is my only complaint that authors of these mysteries could work on. Making the time and place flow a bit better. But the things discussed like fashion etc. were definitely interesting.

I enjoyed this cute cozy and it was easy to read when exhausted from the start of school. I will continue with the series as it evolves. 





Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Can't Wait Wednesday: The First Witch of Boston: A Novel by Andrea Catalano


For this week's Can't Wait Wednesday hosted by Tressa at the book blog, Wishful Endings, I'm featuring, The First Witch of Boston by Andrea Catalano. This is an author I've never heard of so I wanted to mention her here and promote the book. 

It is a novel based on the true story of Margaret Jones, the first woman to be found guilty of witchcraft in 17th Century Massachusetts. While I have not always been super interested in this subject, this is a person I'd never heard of and a story I don't know about so that makes it more likely I'll read it. The author uses diary entries and court records throughout the novel which I love for historical accuracy. 

I hope you've found something to read that you can't wait for! Happy reading ya'll!





Historical Fiction

 

September 1, 2025


Book description courtesy of Goodreads

A gripping and intimate novel based on the true story of Margaret Jones, the first woman to be found guilty of witchcraft in seventeenth-century Massachusetts.

Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1646. Thomas and Margaret Jones arrive from England to build a life in the New World. Though of differing temperaments, cautious Thomas and fiery Margaret, a healer, are bound by a love that has lasted decades. With a child on the way, their new beginning promises only blessings.

But in this austere Puritan community, comely faces hide malicious intent. Wrong moves or words are met with suspicion, and Margaret’s bold and unguarded nature draws scorn. Soon, Margaret is mistrusted as more cunning woman than kind caregiver. And when personal tragedies, religious hysteria, and wariness of the unknown turn most against her, even the devotion Margaret and her husband share is at risk.

Inspired by actual diary entries and court records, The First Witch of Boston is at once the riveting story of a woman unjustly accused and a love story set amid the political and social turmoil of both Old and New England. Harrowing, and with a deep understanding of the human heart, history is brilliantly imagined.

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Victoria Victorious: The Story of Queen Victoria by Jean Plaidy (Queens of England Book 3)

 

Publication Date:
January 1972-1976 (Individual books)
Condensed paperback: May 2005

Genre:  
Historical Fiction/Adventure

Length:   
560 pages

Series: 

Queens of England


Book description courtesy of Goodreads

In this unforgettable novel of Queen Victoria, Jean Plaidy re-creates a remarkable life filled with romance, triumph, and tragedy.

At birth, Princess Victoria was fourth in line for the throne of England, the often-overlooked daughter of a prince who died shortly after her birth. She and her mother lived in genteel poverty for most of her childhood, exiled from court because of her mother’s dislike of her uncles, George IV and William IV. A strong, willful child, Victoria was determined not to be stifled by her powerful uncles or her unpopular, controlling mother. Then one morning, at the age of eighteen, Princess Victoria awoke to the news of her uncle William’s death. The almost-forgotten princess was now Queen of England. Even better, she was finally free of her mother’s iron hand and her uncles’ manipulations. Her first act as queen was to demand that she be given a room—and a bed—of her own.

Victoria’s marriage to her German cousin, Prince Albert, was a blissfully happy one that produced nine children. Albert was her constant companion and one of her most trusted advisors. Victoria’s grief after Prince Albert’s untimely death was so shattering that for the rest of her life—nearly forty years—she dressed only in black. She survived several assassination attempts, and during her reign England’s empire expanded around the globe until it touched every continent in the world.

Derided as a mere “girl queen” at her coronation, by the end of her sixty-four-year reign, Victoria embodied the glory of the British Empire. In this novel, written as a “memoir” by Victoria herself, she emerges as truthful, sentimental, and essentially human—both a lovable woman and a great queen.

My Thoughts

I read this series of books in my early twenties and later a publisher decided to take all the individual books Plaidy had written about Queen Victoria and condense them into one trade paperback. The dates on the books run from the early 70's and of course Plaidy was not alive to see this paperback published. It is in my opinion one of the best versions of her books and wonderful for anyone who loves learning about Queen Victoria, especially without the tediousness of a straight history book read. This one and the one about Queen Elizabeth I are probably my favorite so far of all her books. I am trying to read all of her books eventually,  but this one just had to be re-read. When school starts and I'm super busy and tired I love to pick up books I've loved and can read again.

The Goodreads summary tells you all you need to know about the book, but I will add my two cents worth! This book follows historical accuracy in great detail (I have read soooo much about her so I can usually spot something that seems embellished) and her personal interactions with her husband, children, grandchildren, Prime Ministers, and relatives. I love how it is written like a diary and we really get to know her through her personal point of view. The early years were especially interesting to me, seeing how her Mother and others used her and controlled her until she came of age and bravely shut them out immediately. It must have taken a lot of courage at only eighteen years old to do this. A lot of material on her starts with her reign and so I appreciated how we get to see it all from her childhood on. 

Plaidy does not paint her as a saint, she is very human, with faults we all have: selfishness, self-pitying sometimes, and needy. But we also come away amazed at her ability to lead from a young age on, and although extremely devoted to Albert, she did push back when necessary.

The book reads like a novel and I feel is wonderful for someone who knows absolutely nothing about her all the way to those of us who can practically recite her life story. You will get caught up in it and be unable to put it down. 




Sunday, August 17, 2025

Stacking the Shelves #65

 


Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Reading Reality. It's a place to showcase any books I have purchased, borrowed, or been lucky enough to have been given an advance copy of. 

With school starting back up and moving my son to college I only had two books to feature this week. I have not had a lot of time to focus on reading or my blog but I'm trying! 

Hope you find something that looks interesting to you or that makes you remember a favorite book you need to finish. Enjoy your reading this week!




At Bertram's Hotel by Agatha Christie

Libby borrow: Free

I am already listening to Cat Among the Pigeons, another Christie book that is a Read Christie selection. But this is the next one in the challenge that I haven't read and even though it is the book for September I'm going to start it and just have two Christie books going! This is book ten in the Miss Marple series and involves her solving a mystery at a famous London hotel. 






Blandings Castle by P.G. Wodehouse

Amazon purchase: $0.99

Last week I featured book one of the Blandings Castle series by this author but stumbled upon this one that is marked as Book Three. That's strange considering it is called "Blandings Castle." You'd think it would be the first book in the series. It is a collection of short stories that feature some of the famous characters from the series. I'm going to start with book one but this looks like a break from the longer stories and hopefully fills in some gaps like short stories tend to do. 


























Saturday, August 16, 2025

Noteworthy News #9: History Mystery Chicks

 

It's time for another Noteworthy News because there is always something in the bookish/history world that catches my eye or ear, and I want to share! This week it is my discovery of the Facebook site History Mystery Chicks. 

I joined the group and it is so much fun for those of us who love historical mysteries. It is run by authors Abigail Keam and Charlotte Oliver and they feature other authors that post as well. Several are writers of mysteries I'd already been reading too so it is really fun to be able to interact with them. 

There is a newsletter you can subscribe to as well as book tours, prizes, games, and challenges. I won a book through one of the author "takeovers" and received it the same day through Book Funnel. The takeover is when they have an author take over the site for a couple of hours to answer questions and promote their new books. 

You can find out about new authors, upcoming and newly released mysteries by established ones, and ask questions about them which are often answered directly by the authors. It really feels like a personal connection with them.

Sometimes they will post questions to answer for fun and interesting tidbits about fashion or etiquette from bygone eras. I've learned some random facts that relate to storylines from books or just things the authors think fans might find unique. One of my examples would be when they posted about how they decided on the clothes their characters may have worn in their 1920's setting.

If you are a fan of historical mysteries then you definitely have to join this site. It is a lot of fun!