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The SKELETON IN THE GRASS |
List Price: $15.95
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Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Barnard rattles a few skeletons here! Review: "Don't kill her! Don't!" The young Simon wakes up screaming! The gentle couple who have taken Simon in are more than a little confused. In Robert Barnard's "Out of the Blackout," the author sets this finely-tuned and suspenseful novel during the blizt of London during the War. Children have been evacuated to the countryside for their own safety, more often than not to live for the duration of the war with complete strangers. Young Simon Thorn shows up in the village of Yeasdon, along with the other evacuated children. However, his name is on on list, his address doesn't exist, and few clues can be found in the few items he possesses. Many questions abound and Barnard, with his accustomed patience and logical thinking, sets out to solve this mystery. He does so in a touching, poignant manner, and he brings vividly to life all the aspects of these dark and dangerous days of the blitz. Barnard deserves his well-earned reputation. (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)
Rating: Summary: Barnard rattles a few skeletons here! Review: "Don't kill her! Don't!" The young Simon wakes up screaming! The gentle couple who have taken Simon in are more than a little confused. In Robert Barnard's "Out of the Blackout," the author sets this finely-tuned and suspenseful novel during the blizt of London during the War. Children have been evacuated to the countryside for their own safety, more often than not to live for the duration of the war with complete strangers. Young Simon Thorn shows up in the village of Yeasdon, along with the other evacuated children. However, his name is on on list, his address doesn't exist, and few clues can be found in the few items he possesses. Many questions abound and Barnard, with his accustomed patience and logical thinking, sets out to solve this mystery. He does so in a touching, poignant manner, and he brings vividly to life all the aspects of these dark and dangerous days of the blitz. Barnard deserves his well-earned reputation. (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)
Rating: Summary: Death at a Pacifist's Country Home Review: Sarah Causely comes to be a governess at an English Country Home owned by famous pacifists in the late 1930's. First entranced by the family, Sarah gradually comes to see them less romantically as they deal with a series of malicious pranks by the local fascist organization. The pranks culminate in the death of one of the local boys and only the family has a motive for his death. Barnard's characterizations are unusually well done. Sarah matures as England moves towards war, but her disenchantment with the family is not due to her disagreement with their political views, but a growing understanding of the weakness of their characters. The plot is well done and the mystery keeps the reader guessing. The historical context is particularly fun. The pacifists cannot interest the local MP in the civil war in Spain, for example, because he is utterly fixated by the King's romance with That American (Mrs. Simpson.) Good characters, good story, good suspense. The following review describes another of Barnard's books, not Skeleton in the Grass.
Rating: Summary: Death at a Pacifist's Country Home Review: Sarah Causely comes to be a governess at an English Country Home owned by famous pacifists in the late 1930's. First entranced by the family, Sarah gradually comes to see them less romantically as they deal with a series of malicious pranks by the local fascist organization. The pranks culminate in the death of one of the local boys and only the family has a motive for his death. Barnard's characterizations are unusually well done. Sarah matures as England moves towards war, but her disenchantment with the family is not due to her disagreement with their political views, but a growing understanding of the weakness of their characters. The plot is well done and the mystery keeps the reader guessing. The historical context is particularly fun. The pacifists cannot interest the local MP in the civil war in Spain, for example, because he is utterly fixated by the King's romance with That American (Mrs. Simpson.) Good characters, good story, good suspense. The following review describes another of Barnard's books, not Skeleton in the Grass.
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