Abandoned by her mother at a very young age, Dot McCann lives a lonely life with her distant aunt and uncle. A cuckoo in the nest, she spends her days trying to keep out of trouble.
When Dot overhears a conversation whilst playing in the street, her life changes for ever. What she discovers could send one man to prison and another to the gallows. In a desperate attempt to right a wrong, Dot teams up with runaway orphan Corky, Emma, a local jeweller whose shop has been burgled, and Nick, a handsome young reporter investigating the crime.
But Dot and Emma have been recognised and they soon find themselves in very real danger. Will they uncover the truth before it’s too late?
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.
Katie Flynn was born in Norwich and attended Norwich High School, where she was extremely happy and extremely undistinguished. Published at the tender age of eight, in Enid Blyton's Sunny Stories, she joined a Writers’ Circle as an adult, publishing short stories, articles, etc; only turning to novels in 1971 because the postal strike cut off her main source of income! At first she wrote under several different names – Judith Saxton, Judy Turner, Lydia Balmain, Judith Arden – but her Katie Flynn books were a delight to write and proved far more popular than she had dreamed. She has now published nearly ninety novels, twenty-seven of which are Flynns. Her most recent titles are: Lost Days of Summer and Christmas Wishes.
I thoroughly enjoyed this fun romp of a historical novel. A mix of adventure, mystery, romance, and orphans making a better life for themselves. The plot was solid and the characters are all active participants in creating their destiny, not passively letting things happen to them. I listened to the audiobook and the narrator does the different characters and accents really well. Combined with writing true to how people would have spoken, it made for an immersive experience.
Lol, did Katie Flynn really write this book for pre-teens because it reminded me of the Enid Blyton Famous Five books I read when I was between 10-12 years old? The book was not up to her usual adult standard, though the storyline did get more suspenseful at the end.
Read this book fairly quickly, I do feel it is targeted at a younger age group but it was left for other people to read. Its plot is interesting and the ultimate ending is great however it took a lot of getting into.
An interesting enough story. But to me it was more of a story for young people like teenagers. Not really my style of book to read. Not enough suspense
I like an easy read. Not too taxing on the brain and straight into some action. No boring introductions. Based in 1920's Liverpool. Not too keen on the title. I feel the author could have thought up something more interesting or something to do with the actual plot but apart from that, very enjoyable.