Blog Tour/Book Review: The American Agent (Maisie Dobbs #15) by Jacqueline Winspear

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The American Agent by Jacqueline Winspear, alongside my tour buddy Karen at My Reading Corner.  Thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Allison & Busby for my review copy.

The American Agent is the fifteenth book in the bestselling Maisie Dobbs series, a series which has  sold over 200,000 copies in the UK to date.  You can read my review below.  Check out the tour poster at the bottom of this post to see the other fabulous book bloggers participating in the tour.

Praise for The Maisie Dobbs series

‘An outstanding historical series’ New York Times
‘Maisie Dobbs is a revelation.’ Alexander McCall Smith
‘I’m a huge Maisie Dobbs fan’ Lee Child
‘Wry and immensely readable’ Daily Mail
‘A series that seems to get better with every entry’ Wall Street Journal
‘Excellent…In Winspear’s capable hands, Maisie has evolved into a deeply sympathetic character. Readers will eagerly await her next outing.’ Publishers Weekly


the american agentAbout the Book

When an American war correspondent’s murder is concealed by British authorities, Maisie Dobbs agrees to work with an agent of the US Department of Justice to help an old friend discover the truth. With German bombs raining down on London, Maisie is torn between the demands of solving this dangerous case and the need to protect a young evacuee.

And what will happen when she faces losing her dearest friend and the possibility that she might be falling in love again?

A&B LogoFormat: Hardcover (350 pp.)    Publisher: Allison & Busby
Published: 26th March 2019      Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Purchase Links*
Publisher | Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The American Agent on Goodreads


My Review

The American Agent has made me a very happy reader.  Firstly, because I thoroughly enjoyed the book.  Secondly, because it’s introduced me to a new historical crime series (a genre I love) to follow in future. Thirdly because, being the fifteenth in the series, it means I’ve got fourteen previous instalments to look forward to reading.  At this point, I’ll assure readers like myself coming new to the series that The American Agent works perfectly well as a standalone read.  Naturally, there are a few brief references to events and characters from previous books in the series so there are things that won’t come as so much of a surprise as if I’d read the series from the beginning.  However, thanks to the skill of the author, I didn’t feel these references gave me the full story.  In fact, they left me wanting to find out more about the context in which they had occurred.

What we now refer to as the “Blitz”, the intense bombing of London and other British cities between Autumn 1940 and Spring 1941 (which Jacqueline Winspear talks more  about in her fascinating Author’s Note) is the backdrop to Maisie’s investigation into the death of American journalist, Catherine Saxon.   The atmosphere of a bomb-ravaged London and the nightly peril facing Londoners is brilliantly conveyed.  I really loved the inclusion of excerpts from actual radio broadcasts and newspaper articles from the time, including those by war correspondent and broadcaster, Ed Murrow.   (Incidentally, he makes a cameo appearance in one of my favourite films set in World War 2, Sink the Bismarck! (1960), starring Kenneth More and based on the book, The Last Nine Days of the Bismarck by C.S Forester.)

The fact the victim is an American journalist broadcasting about the brutal realities of war which British civilians – not just its armed forces – are facing turns out to be significant at a time when politicians in the United States are divided over to what extent their nation should get involved and come to the aid of Britain and her allies.  For both interventionists and isolationists, propaganda plays an important role.  So some contemporary echoes there…

The nationality of the victim also involves Maisie teaming up with American agent, Mark Scott, (with whom she has history, we learn) to work on the investigation. However, she starts to wonder what has brought him so conveniently to London and just what exactly is the nature of his role especially as Maisie finds herself doing the majority of the investigative legwork (with the assistance of the trusty Billy) despite at the same time doing nightly shifts driving an ambulance through the blitzed streets of London.  Furthermore, she has matters of a personal nature concerning her as well.

I have to say I can now understand completely why so many readers have fallen in love with Maisie Dobbs as a character.  She’s perceptive, independent-minded, thoughtful, observant and compassionate.  For various reasons, Maisie feels a personal responsibility to find out who killed Catherine Saxon and this empathy characterises her dealings with other people drawn into the investigation.   I particularly liked the way Maisie recognises the impact of sudden death on those touched by it and the investigation that follows, even if this is necessary to find out the truth.  ‘She knew that death unsettled any family, but a murder was akin to a bomb dropping – the living were cast this way and that as debris from the investigation fell around them.’    In an especially neat touch, once the case has been resolved, Maisie makes a point of revisiting the key people she’s come into contact with during her investigation, giving them the equivalent of a literary curtain call.

Maisie Dobbs now has a new fan and I can wholeheartedly recommend The American Agent to readers looking for a historical crime series that combines an intriguing, well-constructed mystery, an engaging leading character and convincing period detail.

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In three words: Atmospheric, compelling, suspenseful

Try something similar…Nemesis (Tom Wilde #3) by Rory Clements (read my review here)


jacqueline-winspear-pressAbout the Author

Jacqueline Winspear was born and raised in Kent and emigrated to the USA in 1990. She has written extensively for journals, newspapers and magazines, and has worked in book publishing on both sides of the Atlantic. The Maisie Dobbs series of crime novels is beloved by readers worldwide – always going into the New York Times top 10 on publication.

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The American Agent Blog Tour Poster

Blog Tour/Book Review: Hetty’s Secret War by Rosie Clarke

Blog Tour Poster (1)

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Hetty’s Secret War by Rosie Clarke which was published by Aria on 19th March 2019.  Thanks to Vicky at Aria for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my review copy.

If you’ve missed previous stops on the tour, you can catch up here:

A look at locations in the book courtesy of The Book Trail 
Review by Amanda at Ginger Book Geek
Review by Julie at Bookish Jottings
Review and extract at The Avid Reader
Extract hosted by Nicola at Short Book & Scribes


hetty's secret warAbout the Book

In 1939, with the world on the brink of war, one women faces a future more uncertain than she had ever imagined…

Georgie – when the man she has always loved is sent to France on a secret war office mission every knock of the door fills her with dread of it being the feared telegram boy…

Beth – orphaned as a child, Beth is coming of age and determined to do her bit for the war effort. Caught up in a whirlwind romance, she marries only to become a war widow… and one expecting a baby who will never know his brave father. Can she find happiness again?

Hetty – desperately trying to make her way back from Paris to her beloved family in England, a fateful and tragic encounter brings Hetty to Chateau de Faubourg where she joins the resistance and risks both her heart and her life fighting for charismatic resistance leader Stefan Lefarge…

However dark the times, courage, determination and the power of friendship can overcome the hardships of war.

Format: Paperback, ebook (336 pp.)    Publisher: Aria Fiction
Published: 19th March 2019          Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Hetty’s Secret War on Goodreads


My Review

Hetty’s Secret War is the third book in Rosie Clarke’s ‘Women at War’ series.   I haven’t read either of the previous books in the series – Jessie’s Promise and The Runaway Wife – but I’m pleased to say Hetty’s Secret War works perfectly well as a standalone.  However, it does contain references to significant events in the two previous books so it wouldn’t be the place to start for readers planning to read the whole series.

The title and the book description give the impression that Hetty’s story is the main focus of the book but, although hers is certainly the most dramatic, the experiences of the book’s other female characters – Beth and Georgie – also play a major part.  And we shouldn’t forget Hetty’s brother, Ben, who also has a pivotal role in the lives of at least two of the women and whose wartime experiences contribute to a very dramatic and compelling element of the book.

The outbreak of war sees all three women forced to confront changes in their personal lives and the end of the war will see them confronting others.  The book takes readers on an emotional journey revealing the trauma and loss that war can bring as well as the terrible uncertainty about the fate of husbands, lovers, brothers, sons.   It also demonstrates the important contribution of women in wartime, some in roles which involved just as much risk as those on active service.  It also has a chance meeting to rival Casablanca’s ‘Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine’, albeit with a bit of role reversal.

Talking of films, as someone who loves films set in World War 2, I particularly enjoyed Beth’s meeting with a handsome stranger on a train that could be straight out of the 1942 film In Which We Serve (directed by Noel Coward) in which ‘Shorty’ Blake (played by John Mills) first meets Freda Lewis (played by Kay Walsh) on a crowded train.

I know Hetty’s Secret War will delight fans of the series and also readers who like a strong element of romance in their historical fiction – and who aren’t adverse to a bit of bedroom action along the way with descriptions that at times leave little to the imagination.  Reading the book, I was most struck by its message of the possibility of second chances and that companionship, affection and trust play just as important a part in the success of a relationship as those ‘weak at the knees’ moments at the beginning of one.  Of course, the perfect solution is to combine both.  You’ll have to read the book to see if Hetty, Beth or Georgie end up in this happy situation.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Aria, and NetGalley.

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In three words: Dramatic, romantic, passionate

Try something similar… Flight Before Dawn by Megan Easley-Walsh (read my review here)


Rosie ClarkeAbout the Author

Rosie is happily married and lives in a quiet village in East Anglia. Writing books is a passion for Rosie.  She also likes to read, watch good films and enjoys holidays in the sunshine. She loves shoes and adores animals, especially squirrels and dogs.

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