Happy Friday everybody!
Book Beginnings on Friday is hosted by Rose City Reader. The Friday 56 is hosted at Freda's Voice. Check out the links above for the rules and for the posts of the participants each week. Don’t dig for your favorite book, the coolest, the most intellectual. Use the CLOSEST.The Friday 56 is currently on hiatus but many of us are still including them. Anne @ Head Full of Books is picking up the slack until Freda is ready to return. I think this link will get you to the correct place.
Beginning:
Beginning:
I thrust the tip of my spade into the earth and had images flash through my mind of digging a grave, a grave dug in stone.Friday 56:
"That was very kind of you."She looked at me. "I strive to be kind to all the world's creatures. I admit it is not always easy when one come face-to-face with a hairy spider."
This week I am spotlighting I Heard the Fly Buzz When I Died by Amanda Flower. This is the second Emily Dickinson mystery and on my review stack. Here is the description from Amazon:
When a literary icon stays with the Dickinson family, Emily and her housemaid Willa find themselves embroiled in a shocking murder in this new mystery from USA Today bestselling and Agatha Award–winning author Amanda Flower.
August 1856. The Dickinson family is comfortably settled in their homestead on Main Street. Emily’s brother, Austin Dickinson, and his new wife are delighted when famous thinker and writer Ralph Waldo Emerson comes to Amherst to speak at a local literary society and decides he and his young secretary, Luther Howard, will stay with the newlyweds. Emily has been a longtime admirer of Emerson’s writing and is thrilled at the chance to meet her idol. She is determined to impress him with her quick wit, and if she can gather the courage, a poem. Willa Noble, the second maid in the Dickinson home and Emily's friend, encourages her to speak to the famous but stern man. But his secretary, Luther, intrigues Willa more because of his clear fondness for the Dickinson sisters.
Willa does not know if Luther truly cares for one of the Dickinson girls or if he just sees marrying one of them as a way to raise himself up in society. After a few days in his company, Willa starts to believe it’s the latter. Miss Lavinia, Emily’s sister, appears to be enchanted by Luther; a fact that bothers Emily greatly. However, Emily’s fears are squashed when Luther turns up dead in the Dickinson’s garden. It seems that he was poisoned. Emerson, aghast at the death of his secretary, demands answers. Emily and Willa set out to find them in order to save the Dickinson family reputation and stop a cold-blooded fiend from killing again.
I am adding this to my TBR. First, the title makes me laugh. Second both quotes caught my interest. Third, I love Dicksonian period books.
ReplyDeleteThanks for helping keep Friday56 going while Freda is out.
This seems like an interesting mystery. I hope you enjoy it. Have a great weekend!
ReplyDeleteI really want to read this one! Love that second excerpt especially. We always try to save the spiders but putting them outdoors when possible. Have a great weekend!
ReplyDeleteThe title made me laugh, and the book description is not what I would have expected! The teasers caught my interest too, and I think I would like this! Happy Reading!
ReplyDeletethe book, the title, the 'everything' about it intrigues .. i am adding this one to my TBR..
ReplyDeleteMy post is here