The Ivy Tree

by Mary Stewart
The Ivy Tree
book data
364 ratings, 3.84 average rating, 50 reviews (more data...)
edit

published
November 12th 1990 (first published 1961) by Crest

binding
Mass Market Paperback, 272 pages

isbn
0449215717   (isbn13: 9780449215715)

description
A trick of coloring...Her walk...The way she smiled. If Mary Grey looked so much like the missing heiress, why should she not be an heiress? To the lo...more






Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.







There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »

friend reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.

This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists. Add this book to your favorite list »

other reviews (showing 1-20 of 467)



Jackie "the Librarian"
bookshelves: adultfiction, favorites, mysteries, romance, thriller
Read in January, 1982
recommends it for: for those who like thrillers with resourceful young women
Another Mary Stewart romantic thriller where the heroine is lovely, wears frocks, and uncovers a murderer. And it's the only place I've ever heard of "singing hinnies." I ate up these books like they were popcorn when I was a teenager.
We enter the story at Hadrian's Wall, where Mary Grey is accosted by a man who insists that he knows her, and that her name is really Annabel. Mary assures him it is not, and has the driver's license to prove it.
But that only changes the tenor of Con...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  1 comment

Vidya
12/29/07

Read in November, 2007
Started out okay and it had a great premise - imagine a young girl of 19 leaving her home and village suddenly and re-surfacing after 8 years... But the story suffers from too much description - the house, the farm, the horses, the gardens and also the mind games that the imposter Annabel plays - which takes away from the fast pace of the novel. And after so much build-up, it ends a little tamely.
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Shayne
12/29/07

Read in December, 2007
The only Stewart books I'd read before were her "Merlin" series (which I own and love). This one (published in 1961)was written as a contemporary novel, but is now something of a period piece. Ii was immediately struck by how much the protagonist smokes! More subtly, the attitudes to the "place" of men and women, and the power [im:]balances between them, make it impossible to forget that this is a novel of an earlier time.

There are plot elements that I can't refer to with...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

LJ
11/07/07

bookshelves: contemporary_post_1945, england, female_author, mystery, romantic_suspense
Read in October, 2007
THE IVY TREE (Suspense, Mary Grey/Annabel Winslow-England-cont) - Ex
Stewart, Mary – Standalone
Hodder & Stoughton, 1961, UK Hardcover
First Sentence: I might have been alone in a painted landscape.
*** Annabel Winslow has been dead for four years. Mary Grey, over from Canada, looks enough like Annabel to be her twin. When Conner, foreman at Whitescar, stumbles upon her, it takes a bit of convincing that she is Mary. Con, and his half-sister, Lisa, work up a plan for Mary to prete...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Terrie
11/30/08

A short and adventure-packed story - MS really does a great job of the "subtle hook".
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Linda
01/03/08

bookshelves: mystery_book_club
Read in December, 2007
This was an enjoyable read. It is similar to Brat Farrar, and the author references this fact. I actually preferred Brat Farrar, because I understood the motive of the protagonist much better. I did appreciate the plot twists in Ivy Tree, but thought the suspense was rather contrived. I never bought into the main character the way I did with Brat Farrar. I wasn't able to get this from the library until after our book club meeting, and the main plot twist was revealed there. I don't know if I wou...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Brie
12/19/07

Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: fans of mystery, descriptive landscapes, actors
I am astonished that this book hasn't been made into a film. It is SO visual and dialogue-heavy, that it nearly reads like a screenplay. (There goes my chance at writing it!) For avid mystery fans, the clues may be too obvious, but i was quite willing to suspend my disbelief and enjoy the ride taken by a young Canadian who finds herself mistaken for a long-dead British heiress. It came to a near-unbelievable climax before discovering the truth.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Emily
09/01/07

Read in September, 2007
a little bit of suspense, a little bit of romance, good writing, pretty good pace, and set in the enlgish countryside to boot! i love books set in the english countryside.

basically about a girl who ran away from home at 19, supposedly returns 8 years later. there is of course the heiress/inheritance thing going on involving her dying grandfather, which is always another bonus for a book set in the english countryside.

Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Meg
07/26/07

bookshelves: books-to-grow-up-with
Read in January, 1964
When I was in high school, I discovered these Gothic romances, and they sustained me for several years. After plowing through the ones that were already published, I watched for each new book to arrive. My 5 stars reflect how much I loved them when I was 15! Eventually, Mary Stewart turned to the Arthur saga, about which she wrote some captivating (and captivatingly long) novels, but they couldn't capture my soul like the romances did.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Julia
04/26/08

Read in April, 2008
This was a hard book to put down. It held your interest from beginning to end. I like the way Mary Stewart writes. Her characters are well drawn, but she has a way of holding back information about them that would ordinarily help you figure out the plot and conclusion.This is especially true in the Ivy Tree. The story takes place in England and involves the upper class dilemma of property, inheritance and family relationships.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Michael Sorensen
bookshelves: old-favorites
I read this book while sitting on Hadrian's Wall in Great Britain (and got soaked for my troubles during the Hexham Fair later that week...) and so I felt right at home in the World of "The Ivy Tree" which takes place in that very place. This is a terrific suspense romance. My wife has currently read it twice since I introduced her to it last year, and I have multipled it myself several times. On my faves list.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Lizzi
05/14/08

bookshelves: my-library
Read in May, 2008
Adultery and sticking up for murderers, what more could you ask for in a heroine? And it had started off so well! If she'd only taken a few different directions with the story I think it could have been great, but as it was I didn't really care what happened to any of the characters, so it made sections rather boring. But the writing was so good it was almost intoxicating.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Holly
08/26/07

bookshelves: general-fiction
Okay, so this is another "old lady book" along the lines of Victoria Holt.

Mary Stewart was one of the first "grownup" authors I ever read, mostly because my mom had all of her books, and because I had seen the Haley Mills movie of The Moonspinners.

This one has an M Night Shamalamalalalalalalayan-like twist at the end that makes it interesting to reread.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Jennie
04/23/08

Read in April, 2008
This book was lots of fun to read - one of those mysteries with twists and turns and you just never know who to trust and where it's heading. Granted, the last 30 pages fly by and you kind of see bad things coming (I'm not one to need suspenseful music to tell me someone is going to die). But it was fun.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Kristen
Read in May, 2008
Loved this book! Slow start, but a grand finale to blow you away! Couldn't put it down. Mary Grey from Canada poses as heiress Annabel Winslow to inherit a pretty fortune, but mystery abounds from the past to confront Mary as Annabel in the present. Thieves, killers, family feuds--it's all in here.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Sheralyn
Read in January, 2000
Tis is not normally the type of book I would enjoy, but my mother gave it to me and I found I enjoyed it very much. I have always wanted to get to the old country and Sterwart takes me there. I was very surprised at some points, but not by others. Anything else would give it away.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Betsy
01/18/08

This is simply the best mystery I have ever read. I went through a binge of reading Mary Stewart mysteries when I was in my 20s. They were all pretty much the same. Then I read this one and was blown away. I had to read it a second time to see what I'd missed the first time through.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Rachel
11/18/08

This is one of my favorite two Mary Stewart books. I LOVE how the author is able to write in first person and still fool her audience! Very well done. A little mystery, a touch of romance and a whole lotta class from days gone by... >sigh< You gotta love it.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Meagan
10/07/08

bookshelves: england, gothic-tones
Read in October, 2008
If you are a Du Maurier fan then this author is another one to check out. I liked Mary Stewart's style of writing and plan on reading more of her books. This is the perfect story to read on a dark and rainy day which is what I did- at least the bulk of it.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

karen
04/28/08

bookshelves: littry-fiction
i admit i have a weakness for all that wuthers, so i really enjoyed this. its got everything you need to make your own gothic romance playset, so its a little predictable, but its a quick read and perfectly acceptable (i.e. not to be ashamed of)escapist fiction.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment


« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 23 24





The Ivy Tree (Paperback)
The Ivy Tree (Paperback)
The Ivy Tree (Coronet Books)
Ivy Tree (Hardcover)
The Ivy Tree: The Story of a Perilous Impersonation (T823375CCB)







groups with this book

Seriously Fun Book Club