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The Girl in the Photograph (2014)

por Kate Riordan

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
2942689,480 (3.72)9
"This haunting and richly imagined dual-narrative historical novel, which will appeal to fans of Rebecca and The Little Stranger, features two women of very different eras who are united by the secrets hidden within the walls of an English manor house"--
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Mostrando 1-5 de 26 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
The Girl in the Photograph is a haunting and atmospheric novel that tells the tales of women in two different eras – the 1890’s and 1930’s – and how their lives seem to be entwined by fate. Kate Riordan’s novel is a beautifully dark and beguiling tale which will sweep you away. It will appeal to fans of Kate Morton and Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca.

In the summer of 1933, Alice Eveleigh has arrived at Fiercombe Manor in disgrace. The beautiful house becomes her sanctuary, a place to hide her shame from society in the care of the housekeeper, Mrs Jelphs. But the manor also becomes a place of suspicion, one of secrecy.

Something isn't right. Someone is watching.

There are secrets that the manor house seems determined to keep. Tragedy haunts the empty rooms and foreboding hangs heavy in the stifling heat. Traces of the previous occupant, Elizabeth Stanton, are everywhere and soon Alice discovers Elizabeth's life eerily mirrors the path she herself is on.

Received from Netgalley in exchange for a review.

Alice has been sent to Fiercombe Manor in the summer of 1933 - whilst intelligent and working in an office, she is naive towards men, and soon finds herself seduced and pregnant by a married man who comes to the office. Edith Jelphs was a school friend of Alice's mother, but who went into service to Elizabeth Stanton in the 1890s and became housekeeper later in life. Before Alice leaves London, her mother rifles through some old photographs and for a while at least, Edith is The Girl in the Photograph.

She arrives at Firecombe, to find it a much extended house of several centuries in age, sitting in the bottom of a valley, and much hidden behind huge Yew Trees. It is soon clear there are secrets and ghosts in this Manor House and Alice is spooked almost from the first day she is there. Stanton House, where the current Sir Stanton's older brother built in the 1890s, is long gone, having barely lasted a decade.

Meanwhile there is another story running parallel, that of Elizabeth Stanton, wife of Sir Edward, and who is near full term with her second child. She has already given birth to Isabel, but has had several miscarriages since. She is hoping that this child will prove to be the son she fears Edward wants. As the story progresses, we begin to find that there are reasons for Edward's seemingly peculiar behaviour, and that perhaps Elizabeth is not the most reliable narrator of what is going on around her.

As the story shifts between the two women, Alice beings to realise there is a lot of secrets and pain in recent history around the house and the valley. She finds Elizabeth's diary and reads some of the crytic entries the older women makes and has felt it necessary to hide away in the abandoned summerhouse. The heat of the summer, plus the secrets, the increasing isolation from all she knew in London, and Alice's growing attraction to Tom Stanton the heir, all adds up to a increasingly difficult pregnancy. We begin to realise that Edith is perhaps not the only Girl in the Photograph and some explainations are more unsettling than others.

Her approaching motherhood makes Alice reflect on her relationship with her own mother, and the fact that she will have to give the baby away after the birth. As the book comes to its conclusion Alice's life seems to be reflecting that of Elizabeth and Alice's mother more closely than she could have imagined or feared.

This is certainly an atmospheric book, with the whole isolated valley apparently full of ghosts. A shame that it is published in January as I think it would have been suited better for the autumn market!

  nordie | Oct 14, 2023 |
I requested The Girl in the Photograph from Netgalley and then I found an interesting book called Fiercombe Manor on Edelweiss and requested it. A while later when I had been granted access to them both did I realize that it was the same book. The Girl in the Photograph is the English book and Fiercombe Manor is the title for the book in US and Canada. I chose to read the Fiercombe Manor because the text was formatted better in that version.

The year is 1933 and twenty-two-year-old Alice arrives at Fiercombe Manor in rural Gloucestershire, pregnant and unwed. She has been sent there from London by her mother to hide the shame and the housekeeper Mrs. Jelphs, who is an old friend of her mother, will look after her. The family who residents there lives abroad. Alice discovers, during the hot sunny summer days that some thirty years before something happened to the lady in the house, Lady Elizabeth Stanton, who like Alice also was expecting a child.

This is the kind of book I like, a historical fiction/mystery. I love reading parallel stories, and in this book, we get to follow both Alice and Elizabeth and as the story proceeds we get to know what happened to Elizabeth in the past at the same time as Alice in the present discover it. Now, the book wasn't that great that I had hoped it would be, but it was a good read and above all, it was interesting even though I felt that story dragged on a bit in the middle, but I was probably just a bit impatient. I also liked the characters, I didn't even mind the budding romance between Alice and Tom Stanton.

So if you like historical fiction/mystery books then this is a book for you!

Thank you Netgalley/Edelweiss for providing me with a free copy for an honest review! ( )
  MaraBlaise | Jul 23, 2022 |
I requested The Girl in the Photograph from Netgalley and then I found an interesting book called Fiercombe Manor on Edelweiss and requested it. A while later when I had been granted access to them both did I realize that it was the same book. The Girl in the Photograph is the English book and Fiercombe Manor is the title for the book in US and Canada. I chose to read the Fiercombe Manor because the text was formatted better in that version.

The year is 1933 and twenty-two-year-old Alice arrives at Fiercombe Manor in rural Gloucestershire, pregnant and unwed. She has been sent there from London by her mother to hide the shame and the housekeeper Mrs. Jelphs, who is an old friend of her mother, will look after her. The family who residents there lives abroad. Alice discovers, during the hot sunny summer days that some thirty years before something happened to the lady in the house, Lady Elizabeth Stanton, who like Alice also was expecting a child.

This is the kind of book I like, a historical fiction/mystery. I love reading parallel stories, and in this book, we get to follow both Alice and Elizabeth and as the story proceeds we get to know what happened to Elizabeth in the past at the same time as Alice in the present discover it. Now, the book wasn't that great that I had hoped it would be, but it was a good read and above all, it was interesting even though I felt that story dragged on a bit in the middle, but I was probably just a bit impatient. I also liked the characters, I didn't even mind the budding romance between Alice and Tom Stanton.

So if you like historical fiction/mystery books then this is a book for you!

Thank you Netgalley/Edelweiss for providing me with a free copy for an honest review! ( )
  MaraBlaise | Jul 23, 2022 |
historical fiction (1890s/1930s English manor a la Downton abbey with a lot fewer characters to track) with ghosts/mystery, tragedy, and a little romance. This was a pretty decent read, but I just felt like I didn't have the time for it/wasn't in the mood for it, so I skipped from page 89 or so to the end to see it I would miss anything (not that much--or possibly, everything, it's hard to know). If you want to immerse yourself in the setting however, go for it--the writing style is fine and the characters are moderately interesting. ( )
  reader1009 | Jul 3, 2021 |
In 1933, 22-year old Alice finds herself unmarried, pregnant and disgraced. Her mother concocts a story about Alice's husband being killed in an accident and asks her old friend, Mrs. Jelphs, to give the girl a place to stay until the birth of her child. Mrs. Jelphs is the housekeeper at Fiercombe Manor. Alice arrives at the country manor, playing the part of a young widow. The Stanton Family no longer lives at the Manor, so Alice discovers that she will be sharing the house with only Mrs. Jelphs and a few servants. In the beginning, she is glad to have a place to stay, but soon she realizes that all is not as it seems at Fiercombe Manor. Thirty years before, Lady Elizabeth Stanton, nervously awaited the birth of her second child, hoping for the son her husband wanted. But something dreadful happened, and years later, Alice is not prepared for what she discovers about the Manor and its history.

I enjoyed this book. The story line builds tension slowly, and switches from Alice to Elizabeth's story. The tone and mystery in the book reminded me a lot of the classic book, Rebecca. The story does not move fast, but it doesn't become boring either. The tension and mystery build slowly, until the full realization of what happened in the house becomes clear.

Fiercombe Manor was published as The Girl in the Photograph in the UK. Her other books are The Shadow Hour and Birdcage Walk. ( )
  JuliW | Nov 22, 2020 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 26 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I was asked to review this book by Real Readers. I was intrigued to read this book as the author lives in Cheltenham and I live in Gloucestershire so parallels from the start.

I was surprised by some of the reviews I did think this book had essences of Kate Morton who writes in the same vein.

This was a haunting story set in the 1930s in Gloucestershire. The protagonist Alice is sent to the countryside in disgrace and is under the care of a housekeeper. It gets eerie as Alice thinks she is being watched and things just do not add up. There are secrets hidden in this house and glimpses of a former lady of the manor Elizabeth Stanton and the parallels of these two women.

Haunting and full of twists this is a beautifully written novel.

Due for publication in January 2015, this will be there in the top ten for the summer and will be a great beach read. I will be looking out for this author.
añadido por mexico24 | editarReal Readers, Jane Brown
 

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"This haunting and richly imagined dual-narrative historical novel, which will appeal to fans of Rebecca and The Little Stranger, features two women of very different eras who are united by the secrets hidden within the walls of an English manor house"--

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