maddiesmum
Cathlete
I have read all of Kate Morton's books. They are sweeping sagas, relying on deeply buried secrets and inquisitive characters to create and solve the mystery of each locale: river house, garden, etc, etc. Sadness lies at the heart of each, of course, since these are secrets that families and individuals have buried deep in order to be able to continue living, but the sadness of the past is always surrounded and softened to pathos by the present tense life of the protagonist who unearths the tragedies and whose life and outlook is improved by the search and journey. I have loved and gotten sucked in to each one of these novels in turn. I have walked long miles around and about town in the evenings and have dug and planted loads of plants in the garden, barely aware of what I was doing and of time passing as the narrative of these books on CD held sway.
The only nitpick I have about these books is in the bocd versions: the author is a native Australian and the woman who narrates the books is also Australian, yet each one of these novels is set in the early 2oth century in the UK, so unfortunately, the narrator's Australian accent is out of place and, as a native Londoner, I find it jarring. US readers and listeners might not find it quite so much of a mis-match ...
Here's a link to the titles in Kate Morton's library catalogue:
http://www.simonandschuster.com/search/books/_/N-/Ntt-kate morton
Clare
The only nitpick I have about these books is in the bocd versions: the author is a native Australian and the woman who narrates the books is also Australian, yet each one of these novels is set in the early 2oth century in the UK, so unfortunately, the narrator's Australian accent is out of place and, as a native Londoner, I find it jarring. US readers and listeners might not find it quite so much of a mis-match ...
Here's a link to the titles in Kate Morton's library catalogue:
http://www.simonandschuster.com/search/books/_/N-/Ntt-kate morton
Clare