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≫ [PDF] Free Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books

Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books



Download As PDF : Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books

Download PDF Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books


Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books

Clearly, I’m in the minority, but I found this book tedious and disappointing. It was plodding, so much so that it was halfway through the book before we learned the real mystery afoot. Even then, it was only addressed in starts and fits thereafter. Not wanting to give away spoilers, but when the perpetrator was revealed, it was unbelievable! And the motive? I’ve never read a book where the perpetrator was driven by this motive. Indeed, the writer devoted much of the epilogue to explaining it. Truly a head-scratcher.

The romance left me empty. There was very little of it between the two people involved. Where were the intimate conversations? Where was the time spent together? Even while the wedding was being planned, the groom left for a week on business. I wanted to understand why the groom fell in love. Alas, it was revealed only in the groom’s soliloquy: I would have preferred to see it played out.

I gave this book three stars because I was able to push through to the end. I would definitely download a sample prior to paying for anymore of this author’s books. By the way, this is the second time I’ve written a review for this book. The first never appeared, and I hadn’t violated any of the posting policies. It makes me wonder if only positive reviews are being posted to boost sales.

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Mistress of Mellyn Victoria Holt Books Reviews


Mistress of Mellyn really creeped me out. There I was sitting up in bed at midnight, the dark only relieved by the light from my iPad screen. And I really felt uncomfortable. Uncomfortable enough to turn on my bedside light.

That is how good Victoria Holt’s writing is. She had me swept up in this Gothic romance set in Cornwall. Even though there were obvious references to Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca, Wilkie Collin’s The Woman in White, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and Henry James’ novella “The Turn of the Screw,” nevertheless this story of the governess’s love for her employer and her attempts to solve the mystery surrounding his wife’s death kept me up. Until 4 am!

What is it about Victoria Holt that is so compelling? She immediately creates sympathy for her heroine by writing in first-person in such a way that we are in Martha’s head, and privy to Martha’s thoughts. And what does Martha think of herself?

“…my brown velvet bonnet, tied with brown velvet ribbons under my chin, was of the sort which was so becoming to feminine people like my sister Phillida but, I always felt, sat a little incongruously on head like mine. My hair was thick with a coppery finger, parted in the center, brought down at the sides of my too-long face…My eyes were large, in some lights the color of amber, and were my best feature; but they were too bold…”

Re-reading this passage in the light of the events that happen to Martha it is possible to see that she is a beautiful young woman. However, she doesn’t think she is, and that is what makes her so endearing to the reader. So we are invested in Martha from the start, and as we follow her on that train down to Cornwall, meeting an impertinent young man who pretends to read her hand

“I see a child there and a man…perhaps it is the child’s father. They are wrapped in shadows. There is someone else there…but perhaps she is already dead.”

"It was the deep sepulchral note in his voice rather than the words he said which momentarily unnerved me.

"I snatched my hand away. “What nonsense!” I said.

He ignored me and half closed his eyes. Then he went on “You will need to watch little Alice, and your duties will extend beyond the care of her. You must most certainly beware of Alice.”

"I felt a faint tingling which began at the base of my spine and seemed to creep up my neck. This, I supposed, was what is known as making one’s flesh creep."

Here, Victoria Holt deftly drops in hints that all is not well at Mellyn House where Martha is to take up the post of governess. Is this young man just toying with Martha? Or should she heed his warning? And who is Alice? The little girl she is to take care of is called “Alvean.” The reader is intrigued and hooked, and turns the page wanting to find out more. If you have never read Victoria Holt before, you are in for a treat. Five Stars.
Set in Victorian England in Devon, Cornwall, this is the story of Martha Leigh (“Miss Leigh”) who, at 24, comes to Mount Mellyn to become the governess to widower Connan TreMellyn’s young daughter, Alvean.

After all, what’s an educated woman with no parents and no prospects to do?

Miss Leigh soon discovers that Alvean is spoiled, hard to manage and suffering from too little of her father's attention, which might explain the departure of the last three governesses. In addition to Alvean, there’s a mysterious young child, Gillyflowers, who sings to herself and whose mother committed suicide. Martha determines to win both children and show Connan he is wrong about them all.

So she teaches Alvean, who supposedly can’t ride a horse, to ride well. And she begins to teach Gilly, who all think a bit daft, to read.

But there’s a mystery surrounding Connan’s wife’s death and the goings on around the large house on the edge of the sea that soon capture Martha’s attention. And, despite her better judgment, she is beginning to fall in love with the master of the house.

Holt does a masterful job of drawing us into the mystery—into the secrets of the family’s past—and there are many in this mystery. Oh, yes, there is a surprise at the end.

I love Victoria Holt's Gothic mysteries, usually centered around an old house with secrets and some evil lurking in the shadows. This one is set in Cornwall and Holt captures the people wonderfully. I couldn’t put it down and found myself looking forward to diving into “Miss Leigh’s” puzzle solving for my bedtime reading.

I recommend it!
Clearly, I’m in the minority, but I found this book tedious and disappointing. It was plodding, so much so that it was halfway through the book before we learned the real mystery afoot. Even then, it was only addressed in starts and fits thereafter. Not wanting to give away spoilers, but when the perpetrator was revealed, it was unbelievable! And the motive? I’ve never read a book where the perpetrator was driven by this motive. Indeed, the writer devoted much of the epilogue to explaining it. Truly a head-scratcher.

The romance left me empty. There was very little of it between the two people involved. Where were the intimate conversations? Where was the time spent together? Even while the wedding was being planned, the groom left for a week on business. I wanted to understand why the groom fell in love. Alas, it was revealed only in the groom’s soliloquy I would have preferred to see it played out.

I gave this book three stars because I was able to push through to the end. I would definitely download a sample prior to paying for anymore of this author’s books. By the way, this is the second time I’ve written a review for this book. The first never appeared, and I hadn’t violated any of the posting policies. It makes me wonder if only positive reviews are being posted to boost sales.
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