Miss Locke’s Christmas Secret by Anastasia Hayward

Miss Locke's Christmas Secret

Barbara’s rating: 3.7 out of 5 Stars
Publication Date: 11/26/23
Period: Regency
Number of Pages: 148

I’m always looking for new-to-me-authors to love, and Anastasia Hayward might just be one. This was a novella-length, lovely, warm, Christmas story that left me knowing that everyone can change and not to judge them by what I’ve heard (or thought) in the past. That is a very good message for every day, but it is particularly good for the Christmas season.

One night a consummate rake stole into Amelia Locke’s bedroom – in her own home! He wasn’t a guest – he had entered the home and the bedroom uninvited. Yet, they were both shocked – she was not who he was expecting – and she certainly could not have him discovered in her room. She recognizes him as Lord Sudbury – and shoves him out the window before her parents arrive. Whew – escape. But, that night changes them both in ways both big and small. She becomes a bookish wallflower who dresses in drab clothing and tries to become invisible, and he changes his ways to become a better person.

Three years later, in his endeavors to change, he decides to have a house party over the Christmas holidays. He asks his best friend’s wife to plan and act as hostess for the party – he really doesn’t want to know any of the details – even who is on the guest list. So, he is certainly surprised to find Amelia there!

It was sweet to watch Amelia and Sudbury work together to solve the puzzle game that was designed for the guests while also aligning the puzzle pieces with each other to find they had both changed. I liked both of the characters and for a novella, I think I got to know them fairly well. I enjoyed getting to see their romance blossom and the epilogue was a very nice addition.

If you are looking for a quick, sweet, feel-good, Christmas romance, you might want to give this one a try.

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

View all my reviews

Murder at Midnight by Katharine Schellman

Murder at Midnight (Lily Adler Mystery, #4)Barbara’s rating: 5 out of 5 Stars
Series: Lily Adler Mystery
Publication Date: 9/19/23
Period: Regency
Number of Pages: 320 Pages – (Audiobook 10 Hrs 49 Mins)
Narrator: Henrietta Meire

First, the narration. I thoroughly enjoyed this narrator’s mellow, pleasant voice and delivery. There was enough emotion in the delivery to give you all of the ‘feels’ – happiness, fear, tension, etc. It was nicely paced and the narrator was successful in delivering a unique voice for each character most of the time. However, when there were several characters in a scene with each taking a speaking part, there were times when I couldn’t tell who was speaking. Still, it was an excellent delivery and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Widowed Lily Adler has left the cold and damp of London for a Christmas visit with her husband’s family in Hertfordshire. Yes, they are still very close because they all grew up together and they all loved her husband. As part of the festivities, they are all attending a ball hosted at a nearby estate. Everyone in the area – all the people Lily grew up with – is in attendance and it is nice to see everyone. At least until she catches hints of undercurrents in the air. Hints of gossip – scandal – and she learns that Amelia Hartley, Jack Hartley’s sister, is the subject of the gossip. Oh! My! Goodness! Amelia has just let the gossip run amok because she will not speak about it – to anyone. The man who is also the subject of the gossip, Gregory Edison, isn’t speaking about it either.

With the ball in full swing, the snow begins – and it snows, and snows, and snows until there is no way the guests who live further away can get home before the roads are impassable. The only option is for those guests to spend the night and hope they can travel the next day – or the next – or the next.

So many things happen at the ball – and lots of red herrings are put in place – so you’ll have fun sorting them all out. When the attendees retire for the evening in their borrowed night clothing, the house becomes quiet and settled. Of course, there is the usual bed swapping that happens at house parties, but it is quiet – for a while. At first light, a body is discovered – outside – frozen in the cold. Of course, it wasn’t the temperature that did the victim in – it was the bullet hole that did it. The victim? Gregory Edison! The immediate suspect? Amelia Hartley! OMG – the race is off and running.

Lily, Jack, and Matthew Spencer (a sometimes love interest) are on the hunt for the real murderer because Lily and Jack are sure it isn’t Amelia. With no evidence – none at all – they have their job cut out for them. John Adler, Lily’s brother-in-law, the local magistrate, is totally without experience in investigating the murder and he immediately puts Amelia under lock and key. Luckily, John has a somewhat open mind and allows Lily to help him investigate since she has experience.

With witnesses being evasive and no physical evidence, it is going to be difficult to prove Amelia is innocent, or someone else guilty. Then, there are the jewelry thefts from various entertainments in the area – are they related? Or, is there another motive? You’ll just have to read the book to find out!

This was an interesting, fast-paced, well-plotted, and well-delivered mystery with lots of red herrings and many possible motives. You’ll be solving the case right along with Lily and her helpers, and you’ll feel the tension as the weather begins to improve to the point of allowing the suspects to return to their homes.

Another great part of the story – for me – is the romance. Where will Lily’s attentions land? She has choices – will she make the right one? I’m ready for this part of the series to be defined, and I’m hoping the events in this book will see that happening.

If you are looking for compelling characters, a complex mystery, and a tad of romance, then you will find all of that right here in this book. I recommend it. It was interesting and intriguing enough that I completed it in one session!

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

View all my reviews