The latest in this enchanting and fast-selling series, featuring the beloved ghost Aunt Dimity, opens in a picturesque English cottage where the lovable Lori Shepherd is up to her elbows in pureed carrots and formula bottles, striving to be the perfect mother to twins Luckily, a beautiful Italian nanny arrives just in time so Lori can help settle the local civil war stirred up by a visiting archaeologist's excavation. With Reginald, the stuffed pink rabbit and Edmond Terrance, the stuffed tiger in tow, Lori hunts down a missing document, and the archaeologist digs up a lot more than artifacts. It is Aunt Dimity's magic blue notebook that provides the key to buried secrets and domestic malice, and shows all the residents of Finch that even the darkest acts can be overcome by forgiveness.
What a wonderful book! Of course, I liked the entire series ... but I have to say I loved this one the best. A real page - turner, without being horrific. Atherton's charectors are charming and true; you want to spend time with them! Fantasy, mystery, and storytelling are intertwined seemlessly. One of Atherton's finest!
A Great Book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I thought that this was a fabulous book. I really enjoyed the way the author wove the story, I think she did a great job. This was the first book I read in the series, and I plan to read all of the other books that she has written about Dimity.
Please read this book on a rainy afternoon
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
The beauty of the Dimity series is watching the characters development from book to book. Reading this books feels like a visit with your dearest friend that you only get to see once a year. You can pick right up where you left off without skipping a beat.If you read this one first the earlier books will loose a little something but please do read them all!
Excellent
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I just found these books and I really enjoyed them. I do think that Aunt Dimity and the Duke should be first in the series, because I was looking for Lori Shepherd when I got to the 2nd in the series, but then she and Bill were back in 3 and 4 and all was right with the world. So I recommend reading them 2, 1, 3 and then 4 and hopefully twenty or thirty more before the series is done.Most of my friends won't enjoy the supernatural element supplied by Dear Aunt Dimity, Reginald, and all of the wonderful characters, but they don't know what they are missing.I recommend these for a rainy day curled up on the couch with a cup of tea, an afghan and a cat or two purring away.Get the whole series and enjoy!
Actual human/3D characters grow on you, and in themselves
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
So call me cryptic. I think the feeling that remained with me after I finished this book last week was that Atherton's Dimity series shows us human nature--not pasteboard icons, for the most part--and honest characters. She does *not* rely on stereotypes, unless she's pitting them against each other to see what will happen.In most of her books in this series, I see actual character development and growth--characters learning from their mistakes and human failings. In many of the books, you see people who've been hurt in some way: some of them get stuck in a victim role, and wallow in their hate/fear, and others triumph over their pain, and choose to love and to live. Without being preachy, she quietly demonstrates that you don't have to wallow, but that you can choose to leave the past pain behind and make a new path. When you are caught in the grips of a major depression, it's a beacon, a demonstration that it can be done when the time is right.Enough of that. This was a ripping good read. I don't know where Ms. Atherton did her research on the plight of the Modern Mother in Western Civilization, but she sure has the isolation in a crowd aspect down right. I adored learning more about the village in this book; I can't speak for the archaeology, but the witch felt right (speaking from experience), and the idea that this was a traditional village of ... incomers hoping to find a home of their own, well, that was really sweet and unexpected.I had a lot of fun watching events play out, plots get more complicated and then resolved, and you really ought to stop reading this and order it.I continue to enjoy the way Aunt Dimity manages to communicate, and while I don't think I ever had a similar relationship with any of *my* stuffed animals (what few I had--I was an odd child), I see that relationship in my son and his toys/substitute siblings (his brother is a T. Rex, you know (and glad I am not to have carried THAT to term!)). I also enjoy the culinary overtones in the book.I look forward to the next one; and to being able to share impressions with other F2F friends who've read it.
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