Book Review: Queen of Hearts by Rhys Bowen

Queen of Hearts book coverQueen of Hearts
(The Royal Spyness Series Book 8)
by Rhys Bowen; Katherine Kellgren (Narrator)

Lady Georgiana Rannoch is the daughter of a duke related to the royal family, 34th in line for the throne, and penniless. At the beginning of the book, set in 1934, she’s staying with a dowager duchess after having been hired to groom the heir to the title, who apparently died in the previous book. So Georgie is happy when her mother arrives with the news that Georgie is to accompany her to America. Her much-married mother needs to go to Reno to divorce her current husband, a Texas oilman with a “strange religious streak” so she can marry her current lover, Max, a German industrialist.

Georgie’s mum used to be a stage actress, and on the steamship Berengaria (ship of millionaires) they encounter a movie producer who asks her mother to appear in his movie. The producer bears an unmistakable resemblance to William Randolph Hearst, with his film actress girlfriend and a mansion on the California coast reminiscent of Hearst Castle.

Hearst Castle pool

The gorgeous outdoor pool at Hearst Castle.

Georgie’s love interest, the Honorable Darcy O’Mara, pops in and out of the book, as does Georgie’s free-spirited friend, Belinda Warburton-Stoke. Georgie is notoriously accident prone, but the very clumsy Algernon Broxley-Foggett, a walking disaster looking for a place to happen, adds comedy relief. (I do love some of these names.)

The writing is light and very humorous and I enjoyed it immensely. I was beginning to wonder if the only mystery would be a jewel theft on the ship, but there finally was a murder about half way through the book. I liked the book well enough to start reading the series from the beginning.

I got the audio book and loved listening to it. Kellgren does an amazing job with the voices and the myriad accents, ranging from posh, upper-class British to Cockney to East Indian and American accents.

Autumnal Equinox: Stonehenge #TuesdayTravels

Tuesday Travel button

Tomorrow morning, thousands of people will converge on Stonehenge to view the sunrise on the Autumnal Equinox, hence today’s Tuesday Travels. Some of tomorrow’s visitors will be modern pagans, perhaps dressed in Druid costumes, while others are tourists. I’m sure it will be a wonderful day for all.

Stonehenge

Stonehenge (Art Explosion)

My friend Linda Prine and I decided Stonehenge was on the top of our “must see” list when we were in London back in early July. We were unable to get on one of the private access tours that let you walk among the stones, either early in the morning or in the evening, after closing. So we opted for a regular half-day tour which ended up being a bit longer than planned. (Traffic was awful in both directions.) Since I only had my disposable camera, I have once again resorted to stock images.

Stonehenge closeup

Via Art Explosion

We drove through rain to get there, but it quit shortly after we arrived, though the weather was chilly and windy still. We were happy to have brought our rain jackets.

The stones are amazing, stuck up in the middle of a plain, for what purpose, no one knows. We may never solve the mysteries of Stonehenge. What purpose did it serve? How on earth did the builders move those huge stones without modern equipment?

Stonehenge

Via Art Explosion

We had worried that the fence to keep visitors at a distance would be obnoxious and block any attempts at taking photos, but we were pleased to see that there’s a path around the stones with a low slung wire to trip anyone who strays off the path.

That’s just as well. Linda is a big Outlander fan, and I know she would have tried to go back in time, leaving me to explain to her husband how I managed to lose her at Stonehenge. But we encountered no paranormal activity at the site that morning. Not sure whether to be disappointed or relieved. Maybe someone will have better luck tomorrow at the Equinox.

Welcome, Autumn! Can we please have some cooler weather now?

Linda