By Victoria Hamilton
Some Touch of Madness, the second book in the A Gentlewoman’s Guide to Murder series not only picks up where the last left off but the story’s pace as well.
Victoria Hamilton, AKA national bestselling author Donna Lea Simpson with her protagonist Emmeline St. Germaine hits her stride as our heroine voluntarily goes to the Coleman Institute for Women rather than live under the thumb of her bombastic brother, as well as furthering her mission to aid the helpless, abused and victimized.
Though Emmeline chose to enter the facility for “uncontrollable” women seeking to find out the circumstances of her sister’s death there six years earlier and at the bequest of a woman concerned for her daughter also committed to the institute, Emmeline finds her brother has committed her indefinitely.
Though the plot and setting emphasizes the hold men have held over women’s lives through the centuries, Emmeline’s strength and determination to overcome her constraints is strengthened when one of her roommates is murdered.
I recommend Some Touch of Madness for anyone who enjoys historical fiction mysteries.
I received a free egalley of Some Touch of Madness courtesy of Beyond the Page Publishing, through NetGalley. This review is fair and impartial.
Order online or buy now at your favorite independent bookstore. Mine is Sellers Books and Art in Jim Thorpe, PA.
Victoria Hamilton, AKA national bestselling author Donna Lea Simpson with her protagonist Emmeline St. Germaine hits her stride as our heroine voluntarily goes to the Coleman Institute for Women rather than live under the thumb of her bombastic brother, as well as furthering her mission to aid the helpless, abused and victimized.
Though Emmeline chose to enter the facility for “uncontrollable” women seeking to find out the circumstances of her sister’s death there six years earlier and at the bequest of a woman concerned for her daughter also committed to the institute, Emmeline finds her brother has committed her indefinitely.
Though the plot and setting emphasizes the hold men have held over women’s lives through the centuries, Emmeline’s strength and determination to overcome her constraints is strengthened when one of her roommates is murdered.
I recommend Some Touch of Madness for anyone who enjoys historical fiction mysteries.
I received a free egalley of Some Touch of Madness courtesy of Beyond the Page Publishing, through NetGalley. This review is fair and impartial.
Order online or buy now at your favorite independent bookstore. Mine is Sellers Books and Art in Jim Thorpe, PA.