#BookReview #BlogTour The Visitors by Caroline Scott @RandomTTours @simonschusterUK @CScottBooks

The Visitors BT Poster

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Visitors by Caroline Scott. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Simon & Schuster for my digital review copy. Do check out the post by my tour buddy for today, Jill at OnTheShelfBooks.


The VisitorsAbout the Book

1923. Esme Nicholls is to spend the summer in Cornwall. Her late husband Alec, who died fighting in the war, grew up in Penzance, and she’s hoping to learn more about the man she loved and lost.

While there, she will stay with Gilbert, in his rambling seaside house, where he lives with his former brothers in arms. Esme is fascinated by this community of eccentric artists and former soldiers, and as she gets to know the men and their stories, she begins to feel this summer might be exactly what she needs.

But everything is not as idyllic as it seems – a mysterious new arrival later in the summer will turn Esme’s world upside down, and make her question everything she thought she knew about her life, and the people in it.

Format: Hardcover (448 pages)           Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 9th December 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Visitors on Goodreads

Purchase links
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Hive | Amazon UK
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My Review

I absolutely loved Caroline Scott’s two previous books, The Photographer of the Lost and When I Come Home Again and In The Visitors, she continues her exploration of the impact of the First World War on both those who fought and the loved ones of those who never came home.

Having enjoyed many happy holidays in Cornwall, I loved the setting and the way the author conjured up the beautiful landscape and seascape of the area around St. Ives. There is some wonderful descriptive writing that at times is almost poetic in nature. ‘Esme watched the morning mist lifting. In this opalescent light, the garden was a watercolour and the birdsong was like a salutation.’

The theme of the healing power of nature runs throughout the book. Having originally found solace in tending the garden of her employer, Mrs Pickering, when she was first widowed, Esme feels an immediate affinity with Mrs Pickering’s brother, Gilbert Edgerton, who has channelled his energy into creating a wonderful garden. Esme’s love of nature is shared by Rory, one of the former soldiers who form part of Gilbert’s household. Together Rory and Esme find joy in observing the flora and fauna that surround the house. ‘Rose-chafer beetles shone among the browning May blossom, glinting a metallic copper green.’ And I thought it was clever to include excerpts from the nature column that Esme contributes to her local newspaper back in Yorkshire.

I loved the idea that the act of planning a garden, nurturing plants, saving seed and sowing it again, and planting trees provide a sense of continuity and demonstrates a belief in the future. And that, with time, nature will return to even the most barren landscape, evidenced by the poppies and other wildflowers that bloomed in the abandoned battlefields of the Western Front.

Esme’s memories of her marriage to Alec, her reflection that more time has passed since his death than they spent together, is a poignant reminder of the grief that so many women experienced during and after the First World War; the dreams dashed and the lives changed forever. At one point Esme recalls how she and Alec had vowed to ‘be braver together, travel further, and never be like those couples who sat in disappointed silence’. Now, often all Esme has is that disappointed silence.

Each of the members of Gilbert’s household are deftly drawn so that the reader gets a sense of the very different ways in which the war has affected them, whether that’s physically, emotionally or psychologically.  So there’s silence where once there was a beautiful singing voice, sleep disturbed by nightmares, a lingering sense of guilt at not having been able to save others. However, what also comes across is that they are a band of brothers who share a bond forged in war, one that can never be broken. The excerpts from Rory’s book documenting his experiences on the frontline provide the reader with a stark insight into the reality of war and depict the dreadful sights that he and his comrades witnessed.  For Esme, reading Rory’s book also provides answers to the many questions that arise following the unexpected event part way through the book that turns everything on its head.

The Visitors is a book that rewards the reader on so many different levels. It’s a meditation on grief, betrayal and loss but also an affirmation that, despite discovering what you always believed to be true may have been an illusion, it is possible to find the strength to start over again and the courage to follow your heart.

Did The Visitors pass the ultimate test, namely that a Caroline Scott novel makes me cry at some point? You bet it did.

In three words: Eloquent, tender, emotional

Try something similarTwo Storm Wood by Philip Gray

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thumbnail_Caroline Scott author photo - credit Johnny RingAbout the Author

Caroline completed a PhD in History at the University of Durham. She developed a particular interest in the impact of the First World War on the landscape of Belgium and France, and in the experience of women during the conflict – fascinations that she was able to pursue while she spent several years working as a researcher for a Belgian company. Caroline is originally from Lancashire, but now lives in southwest France. The Photographer of the Lost was a BBC Radio 2 Book Club pick

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#BlogBlitz #BookReview Sherlock Holmes & the Singular Affair by M. K. Wiseman @rararesources

Sherlock Holmes & the Singular Affair

I’m delighted to be taking part in the publication day blog blitz for Sherlock Holmes & the Singular Affair by M. K. Wiseman. My thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for inviting me to take part and to the author for my digital review copy. Do check out the posts by the other book bloggers taking part in today’s blitz.


Sherlock Holmes and the Singular AffairAbout the Book

Before Baker Street, there was Montague.

Before partnership with a former army doctor recently returned from Afghanistan, Sherlock Holmes had but the quiet company of his own great intellect. Solitary he might be but, living as he did for the thrill of the chase, it was enough.

For a little while, at the least, it was enough.

That is, until a client arrives at his door with a desperate plea and an invitation into a world of societal scandal and stage door dandies. Thrust deep in an all-consuming role and charged with the safe-keeping of another, Holmes must own to his limits or risk danger to others besides himself in this the case of the aluminium crutch.

Format: Hardcover (192 pages )          Publisher:
Publication date: 7th December 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Crime, Mystery

Find Sherlock Holmes & the Singular Affair on Goodreads

Purchase links
Hive | Amazon UK
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

Effectively a prequel (and a homage) to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s original stories, the Sherlock Holmes of the author’s imagining has all the observational and deductive skills we have come to expect. This is demonstrated when he identifies a character as a violin player purely from a mark on his right index finger. Okay, he’s a bit of a show-off. However he also has a cabbie’s in-depth knowledge of London and demonstrates a remarkable facility for disguise.

Fans of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories will have fun spotting the occasional allusions to the original series, including to those ‘untold stories’ often mentioned in passing at the beginning of cases. The aluminium crutch that features in this book is a case in point.  Clearly the author has an encyclopeadic of the Sherlock Holmes stories as there are references to both well-known characters from the original, such as Inspector Lestrade, and to less well-known ones, such as Langdale Pike. I’m sure there were other allusions I missed but my favourite was the name of the alter ego Sherlock Holmes adopts in order to pursue his investigation – Ormond Secker. I’ll pause while you go and search online for that… Are you back? Clever, isn’t it?

Even if you’re not familiar with the original stories, Sherlock Holmes & the Singular Affair is an entertaining historical crime mystery which has moments of melodrama and moments when you might be justified in wondering just how on earth Holmes is going to make sense of everything. Since most of us lack the impressive deductive abilities of Sherlock Holmes, I suggest you just sit back and enjoy the ride.

In three words: Lively, engaging, ingenious

Try something similar: The Vanished Bride by Bella Ellis

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M K WisemanAbout the Author

M. K. Wiseman has degrees in Interarts & Technology and Library & Information Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her office, therefore, is a curious mix of storyboards and reference materials. Both help immensely in the writing of historical novels. She currently resides in Cedarburg, Wisconsin.

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