Book Review: The Magpie Tree by Katherine Stansfield

The Magpie Tree CoverAbout the Book

Jamaica Inn, 1844: the talk is of witches. A boy has vanished in the woods of Trethevy on the North Cornish coast, and a reward is offered for his return.

Shilly has had enough of such dark doings, but her new companion, the woman who calls herself Anna Drake, insists they investigate. Anna wants to open a detective agency, and the reward would fund it. They soon learn of a mysterious pair of strangers who have likely taken the boy, and of Saint Nectan who, legend has it, kept safe the people of the woods. As Shilly and Anna seek the missing child, the case takes another turn – murder.

Something is stirring in the woods and old sins have come home to roost.

Format: Hardcover, ebook (320 pp.)    Publisher: Allison & Busby
Published: 22nd March 2018                  Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical 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 Magpie Tree on Goodreads


My Review

The book’s compelling opening line, ‘The day I went to Jamaica Inn was the day I saw a man hanged’, brought to mind Daphne du Maurier and the opening lines of her novel, My Cousin Rachel: ‘They used to hang men at Four Turnings in the old days.’    Indeed, in the first paragraphs of the book, the author inserts plenty of enticing nuggets of information and clues about what may have occurred in the previous book in the series, Falling Creatures.  As a reader, I was at once intrigued and curious to learn more about the characters I was meeting and what their experiences had been up until now.

And what interesting characters are our two protagonists: Shilly, and the woman who calls herself Anna.  There are hints of some sort of tragedy in Shilly’s past, which in part explains her weakness for alcohol to try to keep the demons at bay.  Shilly is sensitive to those forces that can’t be explained by science, seeing visions that at times provide valuable information.  Or perhaps they’re nothing more than the manifestations of over-indulgence.  Anna is the complete opposite – although they do say opposites attract, don’t they?  She’s practical, preferring factual explanations for seemingly strange events over belief in superstition or magic.  Shilly recognises this difference between them: ‘On the moor, in the woods, wherever we were in Cornwall, there were things she couldn’t make sense of.  Things she needed me for.’  However, just like Shilly, there are elements of Anna’s previous life that are a mystery also.  Together Anna and Shilly make an unconventional and engaging crime detecting partnership.  However, it’s a partnership in which Anna definitely wears the trousers (and often not just metaphorically).

Shilly and Anna learn of the reward being offered by landowner, Sir Vivian Orton for information about a missing local boy and, since they are in need of funds and Anna is keen to further her ambition of becoming a detective, they travel to Trethevy to begin their investigation.    Suspicion has fallen on two women new to the area, ‘furriners’ believed by the locals to be involved in witchcraft and to have spirited the boy away.  I’m not going to say anything more about the plot but leave you to discover it for yourself.  However, eventually Shilly and Anna do uncover the solution to the mystery but not before sins of the past have been revealed and a kind of retribution has taken place.

There is some gorgeously sensual writing and I also loved the inclusion of fragments of Cornish dialect.  The author injects an air of mystery and the supernatural into the story that provides an extra dimension.  For example, the spooky magpie tree of the title, considered by some of the locals to be sacred, that has shades of Daphne du Maurier’s ‘The Birds’.  There is also a sense of the forces of nature at work, such as the forest that seems to shift in order to help, hinder, confuse, hide or reveal.    The book also engages with the notion of difference, with the two women suspected of involvement in the disappearance being regarded with suspicion and becoming convenient scapegoats largely because they are ‘furriners’.

I loved The Magpie Tree.  It ticked all the boxes for me as a historical mystery: intriguing story line, interesting and engaging central characters, great period detail and atmospheric location.   Immediately I turned the final page, I added the previous book in the series, Falling Creatures, to my wish-list and I’ll be eagerly awaiting news of the next book in the series.   Click here to read Katherine’s guest post, ‘Sequels: looking back or looking forward?’ published on my blog recently.

The Magpie TreeI received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Allison & Busby, in return for an honest and unbiased review.  (Can I just say that, as far as I’m concerned, Allison & Busby are hitting it out of the park when it comes to my kind of historical fiction novel lately.)

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Atmospheric, intriguing, mysterious

Try something similar…The Wicked Cometh by Laura Carlin (click here to read my review)


About the Author

Katherine Stansfield is a novelist and poet whose debut novel, The Visitor, won the Holyer an Gof Fiction Award.  She grew up in the wilds of Bodmin Moor in Cornwall and lived on the west coast of Wales for many years.

Katherine Stansfield
Photo credit: Keith Morris

Connect with Katherine

Website  ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Goodreads

Book Review: Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen (Six Tudor Queens #3) by Alison Weir

Jane Semour The Haunted QueenAbout the Book

Eleven days after the death of Anne Boleyn, Jane is dressing for her wedding to the King. She has witnessed at first hand how courtly play can quickly turn to danger and knows she must bear a son…or face ruin.  This new Queen must therefore step out from the shadows cast by Katherine and Anne. In doing so, can she expose a gentler side to the brutal King?

Acclaimed, bestselling historian Alison Weir draws on new research for her captivating novel, which paints a compelling portrait of Jane and casts fresh light on both traditional and modern perceptions of her. Jane was driven by the strength of her faith and a belief that she might do some good in a wicked world.

History tells us how she died.  This spellbinding novel explores the life she lived.

Format: Hardcover, ebook (544 pp.)    Publisher: Headline
Published: 3rd May 2018                         Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
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 Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen on Goodreads


My Review

For someone who lived a relatively short life, this is quite a long book.  The author takes us in detail through events of the three years that the author describes as ‘the most tumultuous…in England’s history’.   Since the lives of Katherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour overlapped, readers of the previous two books in the series will find themselves reliving the events of the ‘King’s Great Matter’ over again, albeit from a different perspective.

I enjoyed the sections covering Jane’s childhood and the home life of the Seymour family at Wulfhall.  It provides an interesting insight into the working of a Tudor household and here, as throughout the book, there is wonderful detail about clothing, food and the routines of daily life that provides a real sense of authenticity.  ‘Mother had excelled herself: among the dishes there were baked meats, raised pies, savoury tarts, salmon in sauce, capons in wine, blancmanges and berries is season.’ Events also take place that arguably have a lasting impact on Jane’s view of marriage.

Jane’s appointment as maid-in-waiting to first Queen Katherine and then Anne Boleyn demonstrates how women of the nobility were frequently pawns in a power game for preferment and position, either through being placed in prestigious roles at Court or through making advantageous marriages.  At times, this presents Jane with difficult moral choices: should she be true to her beliefs and risk her family’s advancement or obey her family’s wishes?  As one of her fellow maids observes, “Oh, Jane – who are we to question?  Our families make our moral choices for us.”   The book provides a compelling picture of the Royal Court as a place of intrigue, conspiracy, secret allegiances, false flattery and dissembling with imprisonment, exile or worse the price for opposing the King’s will.  Particularly, since the King’s will can change like the wind.

When Jane finally accepts Henry’s attentions, it is partly because she believes it may be God’s way of enabling her to end the attack on the Church initiated by the followers of Anne Boleyn and save the King from eternal damnation.   However, she is merely a pawn once again and the nearer to the King, the more danger lurks behind every door.  ‘It was a terrifying world she inhabited….Nowhere, least of all this glittering, teeming court seething with intrigue, was safe.’

The author paints a picture of Jane as devout, with a strong moral compass, intelligent, perceptive and, surprising even herself perhaps at times, willing to express her opinions boldly. Jane’s devotion to Henry is depicted as sincere and accompanied by a physical attraction.  This is relevant to a development in the story which the author talks about the evidence for in her Author’s Note. Following Anne Boleyn’s fall from grace, putting aside her doubts and misgivings, Jane agrees to marry the King.   However, as most of us know from school history lessons, happiness did not await.  The King, however, did get that for which he had disposed of two wives.

Jane SeymourIn her fascinating Author’s Note at the end of the book, the author freely admits that documentary evidence about the life of Jane Seymour is scant – ‘She left barely a letter…Her recorded utterances are few.’  Alison Weir goes on to say, ‘Had she [Jane] left behind letters giving insights into her views on these events, we would know much more about the role she played in them – but she didn’t, and therefore she remains an enigma.’  However, the role of the author of historical fiction is to populate the gaps in the historical records using their imagination. This, the author does in a way this reader certainly found plausible, credible and, importantly, entertaining.  I look forward to reading the next book in the series.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Headline, and NetGalley in return for an honest and unbiased review.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Detailed, intimate, well-researched

Try something similar…Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir


Alison WeirAbout the Author

Alison Weir is a British writer of history books for the general public, mostly in the form of biographies about British kings and queens. She currently lives in Surrey, England, with her two children.  Before becoming an author, Weir worked as a teacher of children with special needs. She received her formal training in history at teacher training college.

Connect with Alison

Website  ǀ  Facebook  ǀ  Twitter ǀ  Goodreads