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Product Details
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After attending a luncheon with the Reverend Tait, Dandy finds herself traveling with the benevolent clergyman back to his home to attend a meeting of the Rural Women’s Institute. A stranger has been roaming the parish at night and pouncing on the ladies of the Rural, though this stranger only seems to appear at a full moon. After some investigation, Dandy begins to wonder if the story of the stranger is simply used by the residents of the village to hide a darker, more sinister secret.
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Most helpful customer reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars
Bury Her Deep,
By Sheilagh Lee "S.G.Lee" (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bury Her Deep (Paperback)
By Catriona MacPherson Bury Her Deep is the second book in the Dandy Gilver Series. Dandy Gilver is a wealthy farmer's wife or so it appears to the outside world but the war and economy has altered their financial situation and Dandy has found a source for earning a little pin money. She has become a detective a secret she keeps from her husband Hugh by allowing him to think she is acting the society wife doing her husband proud by representing him in charities and the like. Dandy is approached by Hugh's good friend and minister to solve the mystery of the Dark Stranger in a small village. The minister believes that the newly formed Women's rural institute maybe the target of these attacks as all the woman have been at these meetings. The villagers like a lot of small villages keep to themselves and do not welcome strangers and their questions. Dandy has difficult getting to the heart of the mystery as the women who were attacked don't want to even discuss it. When they do some of them raise the spectre of witchcraft being involved, Dandy dismisses it but then has to ask herself if she really has all the facts. While the story of this book sounds interesting and compelling, I had trouble delving into this book simply because I could not like the protagonist Dandy. I found Dandy an unlikeable character and because of some of the dialogue being in Olde English found myself struggling to understand what was happening in the book.That said Ms. Macpherson is an interesting writer and I may try another in the series and see if I like that better. *** 3 stars out of five
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews) 2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mischief in Scotland,
By Beverley Strong - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Bury Her Deep (Paperback)
Dandy Gilver, a bored mother and wife of Hugh Gilver, a wealthy farmer, is now a self proclaimed detective having successfully solved one case..and been paid for doing so..is now prepared to accept the offer of a minister of the church in Fife , to solve the mystery of the "Dark Stranger". Ladies of the newly formed Women's Rural Institute in a small village, have been attacked when on their way home from meetings by a stranger dressed in dark clothes, who pulls out strands of their hair. Dandy stays at the manse with the minister and his daughter, but doesn't get far with her questioning of the victims, all of whom seem strangely reticent about details of their attacker. The villagers are a strange lot, clinging determinedly to the past, unwilling to accept new ideas and intermarrying for generations. When some of the locals raise the subject of witchcraft, Dandy dismisses the idea as superstitious nonsense as it's 1924, but later has to question her own thoughts on the matter. It's a strange book with some very likeable characters and quite a few kinky ones which is often the case in tales of the inhabitants of small villages.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Cozy Mystery!,
By andiesenji - Published on Amazon.com
I love this series. Dandy Gilver is a wonderful character, very believable, charming and someone I would love to have as a friend, if she existed in real life.I read a great many mysteries, mostly cozies and I have become more particular in recent years as I have narrowed my definition of what I consider a cozy. Things that irritate me in some so-called cozies are episodes of behavior that would never be tolerated in the era in which the story is placed, gratuitous and graphic sexual conduct, especially when it does not advance the story line, and the use of language that was not common to the era or the area. I was charmed by the first book in the series (After the Armistice Ball) and immediately looked for other books by this author, Catriona McPherson. In my opinion this author is very talented and has the genre of the cozy mystery well in hand and writes about the post WWI period as if she had been there. I have read all the books except for The Winter Ground, which I have ordered but the first was lost in the mail so I have had to reorder from another vendor. For anyone who loves cozies and loves to read about Scotland in the early part of the twentieth century, you can't go wrong with this series.
5.0 out of 5 stars
I ADORE Dandy Gilver,
By tme - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Bury Her Deep (Paperback)
I can't say enough about the Dandy Gilver series. I read quite a few other mystery series, and end up getting disillusioned with the mediocre writing and lackluster plots. No so for this series - it feels so true to the times, and the writing is impeccable. I love the way the series is unpredictable -- it's not just a typical mystery formula. Some are quite dark, and the characters always surprise. I also love the true to life portrayal of Dandy's homelife, and how chilly her marriage is. It makes her feel like a real woman of her times, and not a set character. I just ordered the newest installment and can't wait to dive in. Keep going Catriona!!!
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