This book was absolutely horrendous and I cannot begin to fathom HOW anyone could have given it more than one star. If I could, I'd give it no stars. I am serious when I say it is horrendous, in every way possible. No exaggeration, I promise.
What sold this to me was the premise of the story, which sounds absolutely brilliant and exciting. A chain of immortal Miss Hatfields, traveling in time, and carefully selecting their successors when their time is up, to take over their roles and responsibilities. A story filled with time travel, immortality, mystery and romance? What's there not to love? This book had it all.
Nope. This book had nothing. The author failed miserably with the execution. There was no depth, no character development, and no storyline. A plot with more holes in it than I can count that never moves forward or goes anywhere. How could you go so wrong with such an incredible premise?
It read like someone in High School wrote it, with concepts that are highly complex delivered with such naive simplicity taking everything away from the story and its characters. It doesn't explain anything that happens, and instead focuses entirely on an extremely silly love story. I picked this up hoping for adventure and mystery and fantasy, I ended up getting what was akin to a very badly written historical romance novel.
How can an 11 year old, Cynthia, be lured into a strange neighbor's house to be pretty much abducted, drugged and transformed into an immortal adult, without her consent or knowledge, be OK? Not only that though, what drove me mad, was how QUICKLY she got over it! I would have been traumatized. Hell, I would've locked myself up for days and weeks and months, crying and sobbing and going crazy. I mean, your whole LIFE just changed, everything you ever knew is gone. You can't see or speak to your parents, you can't see or speak to any of your friends or family, your life as you knew it is done. Your name is not even Cynthia anymore, but Miss Hatfield!! And you just wake up the next day and you're ready to tackle on this new persona? Just like that? I'm supposed to believe that this 11 year old girl in an adult body has just gotten over all of that with just a few hours of restless sleep?
And then the sixth Miss Hatfield, who was responsible for - basically - ruining Cynthia's life, asks her to go back in time and sneak into a stranger's house and steal a painting for her, and Cynthia just...agrees. No resistance whatsoever. She takes on this task, with no questions asked, trusting the former Miss Hatfield's very simple explanation, and just gets on with it? How is that even possible? Where's the doubt and suspicion? How do you create an entire story without any sort of emotion grounded in reality?
But wait, it's not over yet. Oh no no no. It gets worse. Yes, indeed, it does.
Cynthia, who fails at stealing the painting is caught at the old gentleman's house and his nephew, whom Cynthia's never met in her life decides to save her by telling his uncle that she's Rebecca - the cousin that was supposed to be visiting.
So 1. the uncle does not know how his niece looks like, that he believes Cynthia is Rebecca, and 2. Henley, the nephew, decides to help this stranger out for no other reason than....I don't even know. She's pretty? Love at first sight? Intrigue? Stupidity?
I would understand if he let her get away with it so he can deal with her later, and figure out what was happening and why she was at his uncle's house, but the fact is, he doesn't do any of that. He confronts her, and she refuses to tell him anything - including her real name - and he agrees. He just...AGREES. Everyone is so freaking silly in this book! He doesn't question her, he goes along with her secret identity and ends up FALLING for her and then we're just left with this cheesy, silly romance between her and Henley, which she knows is doomed from the start. And then when she DOES confess to him the reason she was at his uncle's house and how she needs that painting, but cannot tell him WHY she needs that painting, what do you think he does?
Does he get angry? Does he kick her out for being insane? Does he rat her out? Oh Lord, no. He tells her not to worry about it. He tells her he'll take care of it and get her the painting - no explanation needed. I mean, for crying out loud, put up SOME resistance will you? Ridiculous. Absolutely ridiculous story.
Not taking into consideration all the grammar and spelling mistakes of course, or how poorly written this book is.
We never get into the history of immortality. We never get into any of the fantastic stuff that was mentioned on the back of the book. We never get an explanation about the whole time travel stuff, or the reason they're all called Miss Hatfield, or why they're immortal or why the former Miss Hatfield even wanted that painting. We never delve into that stuff. We're just presented with the silliest, most naive, romance ever.
Ridiculous.