I love Thanksgiving food. In the month preceding the
holiday, my mouth begins to water at the very thought of our particular
traditional dishes. And there’s a reason for that expectation – every dish is
chock full of sugar and butter and cream. My cranberries? 2 full cups of sugar!
My yams? Sugar and butter and then more sugar! I make a spinach gratin dish
that involves butter and milk and cream and cheese! It’s a once-a-year
system overload of the bad things that make food delicious.
Once I sank into my post-meal food coma, I also sank into The Lake House by Kate Morton. This book has been the darling of the blogging community,
so I ignored the goofball cover and jumped in.
(The face on the cover of The Lake House reminded me of this type of 80s cover. Nice outfit, Dude!) |
And you know what?
This is a great book to read if you don’t want to work hard and if you want to
be transported to a different time and place. It was full of literary sugar.
Full of it! Brimming over, in fact, and then drizzled with butter and cream and
more sugar.
The novel strikes me as a mashup of a cozy mystery and a
gothic romance. There are several story lines running alongside each other, and
the narrative jumps back and forth in time as the reader tries to figure out
two separate mystery arcs. At the center of both is a detective named Sadie
Sparrow, who is on leave from her job in 2003 after acting as a leak in an
investigation. That investigation involves a woman who disappears and leaves
her small child at home alone. The police department concludes that the woman
vanished on her own terms; Sadie thinks foul play was involved. On her break from work, she stays with her grandfather in the country. While there, she stumbles upon an abandoned
estate that (miraculously) has been left exactly as it was in the 1930s. Sadie
finds herself trying to solve the many decades old mystery of a baby who went
missing at the house.
(Here's a creepy abandoned estate I stumbled upon in Ireland. I did not uncover any mysteries, unfortunately.) |
If you like non-violent who-dunnits or books about crumbling mansions with hidden passageways and even more hidden secrets, this book is
definitely for you. However, this is one of those novels where I had to
constantly remind myself not to overthink things. There were so many convenient
developments that pushed this plot along – e.g. a crime scene virtually
untouched after 70 years and characters that helpfully write everything down in
letters to be discovered later. I felt pulled away from the vibrant historical
world each time Sadie got unrealistically lucky.
But I suppose you shouldn’t turn to a gothic
romance-y mystery if what you’re looking for is realism. Morton gives the
reader exactly what she promises, and for me, it was an entertaining holiday
indulgence.
5 comments:
I recently read "The Lake House" too and I liked it pretty well, but I thought it got kind of draggy and dull at a few points. Interestingly, I normally pick out exactly the types of plot holes and overly-convenient developments you mentioned but somehow I didn't really notice those here! I think I was too busy thinking about how similar the plot was to "The Thirteenth Tale," which I had just finished. Have you read "The Secret Keeper" by Morton? If not, you should -- I thought it was a 5-star read! (P.S. I don't really like the cover either. I don't know why they didn't keep it consistent with her other covers?)
I haven't read The Secret Keeper yet. I'll check it out. I did read another one by Morton (Creepy old house filled with old spinsters? Can't remember the title).
Nice review about The Lake House. I really liked it.
In reference to The Secret Keeper and The Thirteenth Tale....
I enjoyed The Secret Keeper and LOVED The Thirteenth Tale. :) I have to think about if these two books are similar. Thanks for the thoughts.
Was the one you can't think of The House at Riverton??
ENJOY your week!!
Elizabeth
Silver's Reviews
Another of Kate Morton's that is one of my all-time favorites if The Forgotten Garden. I absolutely LOVED it.
The one I was thinking about is The Distant Hours. I read that in my book club several years ago. I'll check out The Forgotten a Garden. Thanks!
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