The Beastly Earl by Monica Burns

The Beastly Earl (The Reckless Rockwoods #5)The Beastly Earl by Monica Burns

Tracy’s rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

Series: The Reckless Rockwoods #5

Release Date: December 24, 2019

Almost three years after the fire that claimed her brother Caleb and her husband Devin, Louisa Morehouse nee Rockwood, Viscountess Westbrook, has decided to go to Callendar Abbey for some time alone to center herself. She leaves her two sons with her brother Sebastian, Earl of Melton and sets off for the remote Scottish estate. Her trip is without incident, until she sets out to the Abbey from the train station. A storm spooks the horses and her driver is hurt, she takes a horse and rides out on the moors hoping to find help. She is thrown from her horse and injured, she would have died if not for her brother Caleb’s urging to get up and move. She goes as far as she can and finally collapses, but Caleb assures her that “he” is coming for her.

“He” is Ewan Colquhoun, the Earl of Argaty. Ewan returned from the Sudan a almost a year ago a changed man, physically and emotionally. He lost an arm and an eye in the wars and has become a bit of a hermit, he is angry and bitter, not just about his injuries, Argaty Keep is not a haven for him, but he accepts the responsibilities of the earldom and tries to tolerate his nasty, hateful mother and ignore his late wife’s son. When his steward tells him that a horse has shown up in the stables and they believe the rider is lost on the moors, Ewan grudgingly sets out without his eye patch or a glove to cover his prosthetic arm to find the missing rider. He finds Louisa and brings her back the Keep, he tends her injuries and nurses her through a fever. He thinks she is lovely, but believes she was repulsed by him on the moors and once she is well, stays far away from her. But Louisa is not going to be brushed off, she has the gift of sight (an dara sealladh, a trait shared by many in the Rockwood family) and is sure she needs to be at the Keep – she convinces Ewan to hire her as governess to his son Ross, she doesn’t tell him exactly who she is and she concocts a story of going to the Abbey for a position of a companion, a position she lost when Lady Matilda learned she had children. She implies she needs a position and asked him to let her sons Charles (Viscount Westbrook) and William “Wills” join her.

Louisa originally believes that she was sent to help Ross, but as time passes, she thinks Ewan might be the real person she was meant to help. She is attracted to the surly man and when they finally give into their mutual passion, it is beautiful and it seems like their HEA is a forgone conclusion. But what fun would that be? Secrets and lies will have Ewan pushing Louisa away and a gothic twist may keep them apart forever.

I really enjoyed this installment of the Reckless Rockwell series. The story is well written, paced well, has wonderful characters, lots of secrets, really evil villains, some nail biting scenes, a bit of comic relief, a little heartache, some steamy love scenes, a dash of the paranormal thrown in and an incredibly romantic epilogue. I really appreciate that the author prefaced the story with her author notes, it explained many things in the story that might have confused a reader if the notes were left to the end AND she provided a glossary of Scottish/Gaelic terms – also helpful. I do wish there had been a little more background on the Rockwood “gift”, but even without that information, I found this to be wonderful book that I am happy to recommend, it is the fifth book in the series, but it can be read as a standalone title with no problems.

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that was provided to me.*

Wounded Knights by V Clifford

Wounded Knights: (A Viv Fraser Mystery 6)Barbara’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: A Viv Fraser Mystery 6
Publication Date: 12/19/19
Number of Pages: 190
*** 3.5 Stars Rounded Up ***

This was my second book in the series. The only other one I’ve read was the first one, Beyond Cutting, and our intrepid detective, Vivian (Viv) Fraser, seems to have changed a good bit over the four books I missed. You can easily read this as a stand-alone, but it might be good to read the other books to see Viv’s progress in her life. This book begins with Viv returning home to Scotland only to learn that her lover has died in the US. The two ladies had parted on strained terms and Viv feels guilty that she didn’t do more, try harder, etc. Viv is also surprised to learn that Sal has left her an inheritance – one she isn’t sure she wants. Strangely enough, in that first book Viv was recovering from the death of her lover, Dawn, who has left her an inheritance. That book was written in third person/present tense and it was hard to read, so I’m glad the author has changed that in this book. Another change is that Viv has gone from hairdresser/journalist/Dr. of Anthropology to Dr. Viv Fraser, dark web hacker, and hairdresser.

Upon her return to Scotland, her friend Mac – DCI Marcus Marconi – has found a case for her. It will keep her busy while she works through her grief. The lover, David FitzRoy, of the local earl, Sholto Percy, has disappeared and the earl wants him found. Sholto’s lifestyle isn’t public and he’s engaged to a local woman, Pamela. Did David disappear on his own or did he have help?

Viv and Mac begin digging into the lives of Sholto and David and come across some links to the Knights of Malta organization. That organization is a philanthropic one geared toward raising money for the Catholic church. What connection can they have to murder? Then, a Catholic Cardinal (or is he?) is found dead – and he has the same symbol. How is that symbol related to their case?

When David’s body is found, Sholto goes into deep grieving and won’t speak to anyone – well – anyone except Viv. Her questioning and searching through the estate archives as well as the dark web turns up a number of clues.

You’ll have to read the book to see what the Knights of Malta and all of the rest have to do with the murders.

Now, bottom line, I enjoyed the mystery and the investigation. I liked the characters – but I did have a hard time reading the story. No, it wasn’t because of the gay and lesbian characters – it was the vernacular. There were so many turns of phrase I just didn’t understand – and several weren’t in the dictionary on my kindle. I’m sure they are unique to Scotland. I’m sure I’ll get accustomed to them over time, but for the moment, it was hard for me to read. Things like ‘des res’, ‘mis-pers’ (missing person I assume), ‘defo’ (definitely??), ’journos’ (journalists??), ‘Aga’ (I think it must be a stove brand). I am quite sure it is no different than someone from another country reading a book by an American author, so we’ll just have to learn to accommodate each other.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.