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Bezig met laden... Aunt Dimity Beats the Devil (editie 2001)door Nancy Atherton (Auteur)Whhhhhyyyyyy do I read these. Ugh. I am so done. Lori is supposedly soooooo in love with her husband yet she fantasizes about every relatively attractive and eligible man she meets. Crawls into bed with him...really? Why did I read this. Adam seems to accept weird things too readily. Other characters were flat. I can't stand Lori. I don't even like me right now. Stay away from these books!!! Learn from me!!!! I admit, it was the 'Devil' in the title that got me reading this one! This is one of a long series of 'cozy' supernatural mystery novels. Unlike some I've read in this genre, the supernatural plot elements are 'real.' 'Aunt Dimity' is a ghost who communicates with the rather ordinary Lori Shepherd through messages in an old diary, giving her warnings when needed - and helping her solve mysteries, of course. In this episode, Lori reluctantly leaves her toddlers alone with their father and takes an assignment to evaluate a rare-book collection, located in a Gothic mansion in a remote corner of England. But what seems like a straightforward job becomes more complex when first, Lori needs to be rescued by a temptingly handsome stranger, the couple who are the new owners of the rare books library are hardly acting like newlyweds... and warnings are coming from Dimity to 'Leave, Now.' Entertaining light reading. A rather delightful "cozy" featuring the ghost of Aunt Dimity, that makes her voice heard in form of automatic writing in a blue Journal. Wyrdhurst Hall is haunted, the locals are disgruntled, the owners of the manor are rather unhappily married, the husband goes off days at a time leaving his wife alone with the hauntings, and Lori is brought in to evaluate the Library's collection. Little does Lori know that she will be the one to unravel the mystery of the ghostly heriss, lost love, & her untimely death by partial possession..... I easily read this in one day and I'll most likely read others in the series. My blog post about this book is at this link. A wonderful little cozy, easy read, and although I'm not a believer in the paranormal, these books are so well written, I allow myself to suspend my disbelief and simply enjoy. I'll not spoil the story, but the setting in Cornwall, and the delightful characters, all make for read that says 'bring me the next one in the series.' This was my first Aunt Dimity book, though not the first one in the series by a long shot. It's always a bit disconcerting to enter a series somewhere in the middle -- rather like arriving late at the movies and trying to catch up. So I missed out on the introduction of Aunt Dimity, and will have to try to lay hands on that book somewhere. I'm sure several of you (maybe ALL of you -- I'm always a bit late to get on the bandwagon!) have already read books in this series, but it's all new to me. Aunt Dimity is the ghost of Lori Shepherd's mother's best friend, and she is connected to a blue journal that she uses to communicate with Lori with writing that just appears and then fades away (kind of like something out of Harry Potter). She helps Lori solve mysteries. In this book, Lori (who works for rare book dealers) has gone to evaluate the library at Wyrdhurst Hall, in the remote and misty corner of Northumberland. . Wyrdhurst, of course, is said to be haunted, and the current resident is being terrorized by the ghost of her great uncle who built the house. On the way to the gothic castle, Lori gets off on the wrong road in a terrible storm and ends up having a bad accident when she bails out of her car only moments before it plunges off the side of a mountain. She is rescued by Adam Chase, a handsome stranger, and finds herself strangely attracted to him, even though she is very much in love with her own husband back home. It is completely unlike her, almost as if she has fallen under a spell or enchantment. She arrives at Wyrdhurst Hall and realizes that she knows this house intimately (though she has never been there before in her life). The lady of the house is very young and naive and totally controlled by her much older, very cold husband, and she is absolutely terrified at the strange sounds and appearances that only seem to happen when her husband is away on business. Lori discovers some mysterious letters hidden away in the huge library, along with a secret passageway and staircase that lead to a locked room in a turret that no one knows about. And, of course, it takes Aunt Dimity to gently prod Lori along the trail of clues to find the answer to a mystery that is generations old and lay the ghosts of Wyrdhurst Hall to rest at last. This might be an interesting series, and I'll read some other installments if I happen to run across them. It was a generally unremarkable story, though, and could have used a bit more input from Aunt Dimity to keep it interesting, I thought. I'll give it a 3+ and hope for better things in the next one I pick up. This series of mysteries is focussed on American Lori Shepherd, and the ghost of "Aunt" Dimity Westwood, her late mother's English best friend. Lori never met Dimity in life, but she can communicate with her spirit though a mysterious blue journal. The series also includes apparently sentient stuffed animals and a great deal of paranormal activity. The series is extremely sweet, with the good characters being exemplars of generosity and kindness. I am one of the people who finds the main character Lori's roving eye, recurring in the later books, rather annoying. She is married to Mister Perfect as it is, and she keeps running into and almost falling for another fabulously attractive man ! This is a less than charming plotline that isn't improved by being overused. It struck me in this book that one of the reasons that it is so jarring is that so much of the series is a tribute to people who are faithful to their One True Love, even after death. There are exceptions, but Dimity never married after her fiance's death, Lori's mother never married after being widowed. Aunt Dimity asserts someone's integrity by stating: "he remained faithful to his first love until his own tragic death ... ." It seems particularly shoddy then that Lori can't stay focussed on her own happy marriage. In this story, Lori travels to Scotland to evaluate the library at a castle. When she gets there, she finds that ghosts from past tragedies are troubling the current inhabitants, ad she and Aunt Dimity work to set things right. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
Ben jij dit?Word een LibraryThing Auteur. |
Lori is supposedly soooooo in love with her husband yet she fantasizes about every relatively attractive and eligible man she meets. Crawls into bed with him...really? Why did I read this.
Adam seems to accept weird things too readily. Other characters were flat. I can't stand Lori. I don't even like me right now. Stay away from these books!!! Learn from me!!!! ( )