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Search tags: Elizabeth-Knowelden
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review 2020-05-27 15:24
'A Quiet Life In The Country - Lady Hardcastle #1' by T E Kinsey
A Quiet Life In The Country - T E Kinsey,Elizabeth Knowelden

My wife had already read 'A Quiet Life In The Country' by T E Kinsey and immediately moved on to 'In The Market For Murder', the second Lady Hardcastle book, so I knew I was in for a good time with this period-piece cosy mystery.

 

Set in 1908, the book centres around the unique relationship between the redoubtable Lady Hardcastle, an eccentric widow with a mysterious past and Florence Armstrong, her maid and confidant, who is an expert in martial arts.

 

The two are seeking a quiet life in the country which, thankfully two events quickly thwart this ambition; they discover a dead body in the woods and one of the local gentry asks for their help in recovering a lost valuable.

 

For me, it was the perfect light read. It made me smile almost constantly and occasionally laugh out loud. As my wife had already read it, I kept finding myself turning to her and saying, 'I've just reached the part where Florence...' and we'd laugh about it because it was simply too good not to share.

 

Told from the point of view of Florence Armstrong, ladies maid to Lady Hardcastle it is full of nuanced wit, much of it around the rules governing the relationship between gentry and the rest of us. The relationship between Florence and Lady Armstrong is unconventional and based on several years of depending on each other as circumstances lead them to travel through various hostile environment from China, through Burma to India.

 

The mystery is just twisty enough to be interesting and a cast of characters that includes local gentry, the village cricket team, bigwigs in the local shipping industry and bohemian musicians playing 'American Music'. None of it is particularly challenging but it shows off the people well, It is so cosy in tone that, despite the deaths, it barely causes a ripple of emotion.

 

There is some playful use of creative anachronism which allows that Lady Hardcastle, drawing on her education in science at Cambridge, creates two now-taken-for-granted-but-then unknown concepts to help her investigations: the Murder Board (a large blackboard with hand-drawn portraits) and a visual timeline.

 

I also liked that Lady Hardcastle is the sort of woman who has written to Conan Doyle, asking him to stop Holmes from referring to his technique as 'deduction' when it is clearly 'abduction'. I had to look that one up and having done so, all I can say is that Holmes should have known better.

 

What made the book so enjoyable for me was the relationship between Florence Armstrong and Emily Hardcastle (aren't those names to conjure with?). I love the joy they take not only in confounding people's expectations of how women should behave but also in using those expectations to their own advantage. I'd read the book just for the banter between them. It's clever, playful and affectionate. These are strong women who care for each other and who have found a way to live together that satisfies them and holds society at bay.

 

Elizabeth Knowelden's narration is a perfect fit for this book. She gets all the voices perfectly. Click on the SoundCloud link below to hear a sample.

 
https://soundcloud.com/brilliance-audio/a-quiet-life-in-the-country-by-t-e-kinsey 

 

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text 2020-05-23 09:24
Reading progress update: I've listened 295 out of 463 minutes.
A Quiet Life In The Country - T E Kinsey,Elizabeth Knowelden

This is a lot of fun. The mystery part is so cosy, it barely causes a ripple of emotion but the relationship between the two main women and the joy they take not only in confounding people's expectations of how women should behave but use those expectations to their own advantage is wonderful. I'd read the book just for the banter between them.

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text 2020-05-22 11:22
Reading progress update: I've listened 122 out of 463 minutes - This is splendid.
A Quiet Life In The Country - T E Kinsey,Elizabeth Knowelden

It makes me smile almost constantly and occasionally laugh out loud. My wife has already read it, so it's one of those books where I keep going: 'I've just reached the part where Florence...' and we laugh about it because it's simply too good not to share.

 

Told from the point of view of Florence Armstrong, ladies maid to Lady Hardcastle it is full of nuanced wit, much of it around the rules governing the relationship between gentry and the rest of us. The relationship between Florence and Lady Armstrong is unconventional and based on several years of depending on each other in various, so far largely unspecified, hostile foreign environments.

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review 2016-01-22 18:22
Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge (narrated by Elizabeth Knowelden)
Cruel Beauty - Rosamund Hodge,Elizabeth Knowelden

I am once again the party pooper or just the one with horrid taste.  This book didn’t thrill me. It didn’t start out that way. It started out fabulously, actually. I’m a sucker for Beauty and the Beast retellings and I loved the angry, revenge-filled heroine and her prickly interactions with the man she was forced to marry. He was actually pretty humorous.  She punches him in the face, tries to stab him with a fork and all he can do is slyly smile and say, “I do like a wife with a little malice in her heart.”  I saw at least a 4 ½ star rating in this books future but then, as many a book does, it frustrated and eventually lost me.

 

The narration was wonderful.  Elizabeth Knowelden gave it everything she had and breathed life into the characters but somewhere, I’m guessing it was about the midway point but who really knows, after the introduction of a unique love triangle (but still . . . love triangle, ugh), much dithering back and forth and kissing of both men (who can blame a girl, right? ugh), and much less of the fun dialogue that I so enjoyed in the beginning, my attention started to wane.

 

So like any good Beauty & the Beast tale, there’s a big curse. There’s also a justifiably angry heroine and a plot filled with mythology and mysteries and many twists and turns. Those weren't my problems. The biggest problem for me was Nyx’s dithering between her lover boys and her loyalties and the fact that all of her relatives were just selfish and awful and basically ruined her future happiness for their own gain. She should've let them all suck it. But, alas, instead of stabbing them with a fork as they so well deserved, she acquiesces to their wishes time and again and it made me very growly. They were completely deserving of her hatred, if you ask me. I know you didn’t but there it is. On a final note, the ending was decent but the frustration to get there nearly did me in.

 

The first half (or so) gets a 4 ½ the rest a 2. I guess I’ll have to settle on a three.

 

Borrowing my funny friend Shelby's gif because it suits me too ;)

 

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text 2016-01-20 16:59
Reading progress update: I've listened 480 out of 600 minutes.
Cruel Beauty - Rosamund Hodge,Elizabeth Knowelden

Darn, it started out so good but now it's just another book that everyone but me loves.

 

 

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