What a beautiful cover that immediately conveys an enchanted atmosphere, and a promising blurb! I like dual-timeline stories, and I personally really like the era of the 20s and 30s of the last century. So: I was excited! I didn't know the author yet, and I was prepared to be surprised.
First of all: it was great :-) ! What a wonderful, exciting and emotional novel. I really liked it.
This is what it's about: We are in 1924 with Xanthe, the daughter of Lord and Lady Kearsley in Winterthorne. Xanthe is the only daughter, but as a girl she is not the heir; Cousin Jonathan is intended for this....a corresponding marriage is also planned, but Xanthe is a modern young woman with her own ideas about life.... At a summer ball, an accident occurs: while Xanthe is meeting in the labyrinth near the orangery for a secret rendezvous, the mansion burns down completely - but the case is never fully solved....
In 2024, we are with Juliet, also in her early 20s, in London. Juliet, called Jude, has no family left when she unexpectedly inherits a cottage in Winterthorne. She doesn't even know her deceased great-aunt, and is curious about her inheritance. Jude rearranges her life and is fascinated by the history of the place and the great fire of 100 years ago....and she feels a strange connection to Xanthe, who is long dead.
So we have two stories in Winterthorne, which are connected by Jude and Xanthe; and this is where it gets exciting and a mystery element is added, because the two women actually get closer and the boundaries between the ages become permeable. And I thought that was really well done; this is where fantasy comes into play, but this element creeps into the novel and thus gains credibility. Can Jude warn Xanthe about the fire? Is it even possible to intervene in the past? Or is she perhaps just imagining everything?
The protagonists around Jude and Xanthe are also exciting. Of course there is at least some romance, that can't be missed :-) , and an interesting subplot and warning, mini spoiler; there is also a connection between Jonathan in the 1920s and a friend of Jude's in the 2020s. I thought that gave the novel a special touch, I thought it was cool.
There isn't much more to say about the content without really spoiling it, so I'll just say this much: the author has combined mystery, romance, crime and woven big themes like friendship, love, family and self-esteem into a fascinating novel. The result is a book that I couldn't put down and that got me thinking.
I also found the writing style very pleasant. On the one hand, it's super fast and pleasant to "browse through", a real page-turner, but on the other hand it's also eloquent and the language is a little more sophisticated. I'm not a native English speaker, I always notice things like that, the author expresses herself quite elegantly, sometimes I even had to look up a word or two - which rarely happens to me. That's totally fine, don't get me wrong, I generally prefer a more eloquent style :-)
The ending is also surprising. I won't give anything away, just this much: I didn't expect it to be like that and it touched me again!
I was rooting for Xanthe and Juliet and am giving them 5 out of 5 stars! Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the review copy!