Historical Mystery Lovers discussion

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Maisie Dobbs
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Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear
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I love the series. Like Gretchen I have a degree in psychology so I enjoy the early psychological treatment information. The War left a huge imprint in the lives of those in Western Europe and definitely in those who served, from evrything I've read. The series is ... intelligent and the history is woven in as the background. Some historical mysteries feel like the setting is grafted on; it doesn't feel natural somehow. This series is not like that.



I had a similar thought regarding Maisie and Maurice while reading the first novel. I felt like there was an important piece of their history that was some kind of big secret the reader wasn't allowed to be let in on. Those thoughts went away with the second novel.


I enjoyed that one the most as well. I hope to start book 4 within the next couple of months.



Edit: I know I said that about the previous book but I'm changing my vote.

That's actually a big part of what made me quit the last one I tried from this series. (Leaving Everything Most Loved - I enjoyed the first one, but then jumped to this one for some reason.) Maisie getting empathetic vibrations from the murder victim - as I recall she took off her shoes to make contact with the carpet the victim had walked on - was straying too far into fantasy for me. I love fantasy - but it seemed wildly out of place in this. I also couldn't quite reconcile myself to the relationship between Maisie and her man - it seemed also wildly out of place in the book's time period. Actually, I had a lot of problems with this one...


Books mentioned in this topic
Pardonable Lies (other topics)Birds of a Feather (other topics)
An Incomplete Revenge (other topics)
Pardonable Lies (other topics)
Pardonable Lies (other topics)
Admittedly, I have very little knowledge of World War I (or The Great War) and it's effects on those who fought during that time. I imagine my lack of knowledge stems from my U.S. education. World War I was one of those subjects we just kind of blew over in school. I guess since the U.S didn't play a huge role in the events of World War I, schools elect not to discuss it at length. Sorry, sidebar finished.