
编辑推荐From Publishers WeeklyIn Deveraux's familiar latest, Jace Montgomery's fiancée, Stacy, commits suicide while they're vacationing in England—or so, three years after her death, everybody but Jace believes. The chance discovery of a letter Stacy received days before she died and a photo of Priory House in Margate, England—the village where Stacy committed suicide—prompt Jace to investigate. Finding Priory House for sale, Jace buys it despite its ugliness and expense. Dwelling in the house is the ghost of young Ann Stuart, who lived there in the 1870s and committed suicide just before her wedding. A local journalist, the beautiful and confrontational Nightingale Smythe, joins man and spirit in the search for the truth about Stacy and Ann's deaths. Deveraux never raises the pitch very high, and harmonizes the whole satisfactorily. (July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From AudioFile Dagmara Dominczyk brings to life the haunting nature of this story--complete with ghosts and a mystery. After the suicide of his fiance, Jace Montgomery purchases the English estate pictured in a photo he found tucked into one of her old paperbacks. He is determined to get to the bottom of her untimely death. Dominczyk creatively differentiates the novelÕs British characters. The halting speech she gives Jace reveals the sorrow and confusion surrounding his loss. His new love interest, a journalist, is given an educated yet down-to-earth voice--very different from the common accents of the servants and the clipped tones of local law enforcement. DominczykÕs narration highlights the charactersÕ highs and lows, enhancing this listening experience. S.M. © AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine--This text refers to the Audio CD edition. From Booklist Three years after wealthy Jace Montgomery's fiancée, Stacy, committed suicide, he discovers a postcard of Priory House, a British estate, with an enigmatic love note. Although Stacy's family blamed Jace, saying she wanted to end the engagement, he knows their love was mutual, and has never believed it was suicide. Certain that Priory House holds the key, he buys the estate. He detests the rambling house on sight; however, he is intrigued by the Victorian ghost of Ann Stuart because, like Stacy, she supposedly committed suicide before her wedding to escape from marrying her intended groom. Jace knows that if he can untangle Ann's mystery, he can find out what really happened to Stacy. He gets help from his beautiful next-door neighbor, Nigh Smythe, a war correspondent on leave after a tragedy. Deveraux's wonderful addition to her romances about the Montgomery family will satisfy old fans and entice new ones. Engelmann, Patty --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. |
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