There's a lot I liked about this. Who doesn't love a castle that's run-down and in need of TLC, with lots of history seeping and oozing out of its walls? Who doesn't love a back story with some mystery, locked rooms to explore, and the possibility of a ghost? Tick, tick, tick. I really enjoyed this part of the book, and I wish it had taken more centre stage.
My issue was with the front story. There was something of du Maurier's Rebecca in this for me, with Georgie, the wife in the present-day story, thrown into being the chatelaine of a castle and a life she never wanted. She's insecure, she has her own troubled past, she doubts she'll ever fit into the role expected of her, and with all that, she gets quite a lot wrong. I must admit, I have always found the second Mrs de Winter really annoying, and I'm afraid I didn't warn to Georgie in this book either - I just wanted to shake her. Yes, she has a really tragic back-story and when it's revealed you get a lot of why she behaves the way she did, but as I was reading - well, as I said, I wanted to shake her.
That said, I loved the fact that Georgie was the main woman behind a very successful and diva-esque tv cook that had to be modelled on Nigella Lawson, and I really enjoyed it when she finally came into her own. The resolution of the back story, I felt could have been given more room, but that's because I wanted to be more lost in the past and the castle.