A Christmas Hope: A Novel
By Anne Perry
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Although she lacks for nothing, Claudine Burroughs dreads the holiday season for forcing her to face how empty her life has become. She no longer expects closeness with her coldly ambitious husband, and she has nothing in common with their circle of wealthy, status-minded friends. The only time she is remotely happy is when she volunteers at a woman’s clinic—a job her husband strongly disapproves of. Then, at a glittering yuletide gala, she meets the charming poet Dai Tregarron and finds her spirits lifted. But scarcely an hour later, the charismatic Dai is enmeshed in a nightmare—accused of killing a young streetwalker who had been smuggled into the party.
Even though she suspects that an upper-class clique is quickly closing ranks to protect the real killer, Claudine vows to do her utmost for Dai. But it seems that hypocritical London society would rather send an innocent poet to the gallows than expose the shocking truth about one of their own.
Nevertheless, it’s the season of miracles and Claudine finally sees a glimmer of hope—not only for Dai but for a young woman she befriends who is teetering on the brink of a lifetime of unhappiness. Anne Perry’s heartwarming new holiday novel is a celebration of courage, faith, and love for all seasons.
PRAISE FOR THE CHRISTMAS NOVELS OF ANNE PERRY
“Perry’s Victorian-era holiday mysteries . . . are for many an annual treat.”—The Wall Street Journal
A Christmas Garland
“In Anne Perry’s gifted hands, the puzzle plays out brilliantly.”—Greensboro News & Record
A Christmas Homecoming
“Could have been devised by Agatha Christie . . . [Perry is] a modern master.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A Christmas Odyssey
“[Perry] writes with detail that invades the senses.”—Lincoln Journal Star
A Christmas Promise
“Poignant . . . should be on the Christmas stocking list of anyone who likes a sniffle of nostalgia.”—The Washington Times
A Christmas Grace
“[A] heartwarming, if crime-tinged, complement to the holiday season.”—Booklist
Anne Perry
Anne Perry (1938–2023) was a bestselling author of historical detective fiction, most notably the Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series and the William Monk series, both set in Victorian England. Her first book, The Cater Street Hangman (1979), launched both the Pitt series and her career as a premier writer of Victorian mysteries. Other novels in the series include Resurrection Row, Death in the Devil’s Acre, and Silence in Hanover Close, as well as more than twenty others. The William Monk series of novels, featuring a Victorian police officer turned private investigator, includes Funeral in Blue, The Twisted Root, and The Silent Cry. In addition to these series, Perry also authored the World War I novels No Graves as Yet, Shoulder the Sky, Angels in the Gloom, and others, as well as several collections of short stories. Perry’s novels have appeared on bestseller lists around the world and have sold more than twenty-five million books in print worldwide.
Read more from Anne Perry
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Reviews for A Christmas Hope
106 ratings33 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Christmas Hope by Anne Perry
Have read the author's other Christmas works and enjoyed them.
This one is about a party at Christmas but the events lead to a death. Someone has brought along a woman of the streets and there is a fight and she ends up dead.
Claudeen has gone outside for a breath of air when she comes upon the scene and Derek appears with a lot of blood all over himself and quite drunk.
She doesn't realize til the next day at things are not what they appear. She proceeds to find more clues and talk to many more and she does find them in time.
Will it be enough to free the wronged man from jail a Christmas hope when that's all that is left....
I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device). - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This tale is about one of Hester's friends, trying to prove innocent a young man she met at a socialites party. A young street woman had somehow been invited by a group of young men, and ended up murdered. Very much in the style of Anne Perry's other stories, instead of focusing on Christmas festivities.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Claudine Burroughs, a volunteer at Hester Monk's clinic for prostitutes, simply endures her marriage to her husband, Wallace Burroughs. Dutifully attending yet another Christmas season social event with him, she meets a charming if slightly alarming Welsh poet, Dai Tragarron.
Within an hour, a prostitute smuggled into the party is badly injured, and Tragarron is on the run. A servant alerts Claudine to the presence of a man hiding in their barn the next morning, and she discovers it's Tragarron. He insists he's innocent, that the three young men who claimed to have tried to defend the young woman are in fact to blame. Claudine gives him breakfast and sends him on his way.
Later that day, the young woman dies. Tragarron is now wanted for murder.
The incongruities in the young men's story and her own sense of justice will not let Claudine do the sensible thing, and stay uninvolved. She needs to find the truth, and she can't go to the Monks, because William is now head of the River Police.
So she recruits Squeaky Robinson, former brothel owner and now bookkeeper at the clinic. As they each investigate in the spheres of society they have access to and knowledge of, Claudine has to confront some painful truths about her own marriage and her own choices.
Once again Perry does an excellent job giving us both a neat puzzle, and characters who grapple with the problems she sets them and learn and grow in the process. These Christmas novellas, including this one, are also an opportunity to explore a bit more of Perry's fictional worlds and the "minor" characters of the main novels.
This is a great little Christmas story if you enjoy Perry's mysteries. Recommended.
I received a free electronic galley from the publisher via NetGalley. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5In November 2014, I was very surprised to discover the title of "A New York Christmas" and that it was the 12th Christmas novel by Anne Perry as she was a new author to me as discovered when I first read the blurb in the “Early Reviewer” Nov-2014 listing from LibraryThing. I was very happy that I was selected to receive an Early Reviewers copy of the title from the monthly batch of offerings. I love Christmas so I can enjoy a novel with a Christmas theme at any time during the year but it always adds to the festivities to discover and read a “new title” by a “new author” (to me) during the actual holiday season. I could have devoured this treat in one sitting but some morsels should be savored and so I read it in two sittings.
This Christmas, I knew that I would like to enjoy another title by Anne Perry so I added "A Christmas Hope" (Christmas Stories, #11) to my wish to read list and my husband delightfully added it to my birthday bag that I receive in early November. I loved the character of Claudine Burroughs and the author's rich description of daily life and holiday events pull you into the setting that begins in November 1868.
Now, I shall add the first Christmas novella by Anne Perry to next year's holiday reading list and continue from the beginning. It will be a seasonal tradition of rich reading joy.
And for all Downton Abbey fans, this would be a wonderful Christmas gift of reading pleasure. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A tad bit heavy handed but a nice little story about how women, even in Victorian times, can find the courage to step out into the unknown for something they think is right.
I received this as an Early Reviewer book. Thanks! - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I like this book, I will be looking for more on the Christmas series.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I really like Anne Perry's Victorian mysteries, but I had never read any of her Christmas series. After this one, I will read others.
Claudine is a comfortable, well-to-do lady who is only really happy when she is volunteering at Hester Monk's clinic, a place very familiar to Perry fans. In this story she stands up to society to save the life of a man wrongfully accused of murder. The story was well-done and enjoyable, a quick, diverting read. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5As in Anne Perry's Christmas series, this book takes a minor character from her William Monk series and creates a story with Claudine Burroughs as the central character where she is working to find the truth surrounding the death of a prostitute that is being laid at the feet of Welsh poet.
Claudine works through numerous lies and hidden agendas to save an innocent man. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Several years ago when I read very little crime fiction, I did indulge in both of Anne Perry's historical mystery series featuring William Monk and Charlotte Pitt. After a gap this long, I was interested in sampling one of her Christmas mysteries, so I was happy to receive a copy of A Christmas Hope through LibraryThing's Early Reviewer program.
It goes without saying that Perry is completely at home in the Victorian world, and the strongest part of this book is watching Claudine strive to solve a murder when her life is so strictly circumscribed and she is surrounded by disapproving acquaintances and a hateful husband. To me, the miracle of A Christmas Hope isn't that a man's life can be saved, but that Claudine's level-headedness and altruism haven't been totally destroyed over the years. That, in itself, is a triumph.
This latest Christmas mystery is a must for Anne Perry fans, and those who are unfamiliar with her books will be rewarded with a good, solid historical mystery. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Claudine Burroughs is a well-kept but lonely wife of a cold, distant husband. However, she does find human connection and a feeling of fulfillment in her volunteer position at a women's clinic.
When the Burroughs attend a party meant to boost her husband's career, the party ends with the death of a young woman who may have been a prostitute. Three of the society family sons place the blame on Dai Tregarron, a poet and outsider.
Dealing with the issues of class and justice, Perry weaves a story around a society woman who risks the favor of her husband and peers to find the truth rather than accept the status quo. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A quick read that captured and kept my attention for the two hours or less it took to read. This tale takes us into the life of Claudine Burroughs, a minor character in the author's series about William Monk, and gives us much more insight into her back story. The mystery itself was fairly easy to solve, but the book was nonetheless an interesting read, at least for me, given that I do like the Monk series best of Anne Perry's books, and it gave me that background about Mrs. Burroughs. Although the story takes place during the Christmas season, that aspect of it is not overwhelming, so this is a suitable read at any time of year. Thanks for the free Early Reviewers copy!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5To be honest, I've read a couple of the Monk series and while I did enjoy them, there were other series I preferred to pursue. This book is from a series of short mysteries that happen to take place at Christmas. The main character was not Monk but a secondary character, Claudine Burroughs.
At a Christmas party a lady of the night somehow appeared in the company of a poet who was known to imbibe more than average. An altercation on the patio ended with the woman falling and fatally hitting her head. Three young scions of society were also present but when Claudine came on the scene, the poet, Dai Tregarron, is at the woman's side and the other three men indicate Dai was responsible for the accident. Claudine is not convinced and investigates (inspired by Monk and his wife). She has to tread carefully since futures of young people and reputations are at stake.
It took me way too long to read this slim (only 200 pages) book. I think I may have been disappointed that the main characters were not in evidence. If that is the way all the Christmas stories go, then I apologize for my less than enthusiastic review.
For fans of this series I am sure this book will fit right into their comfort zone. Claudine is dedicated and navigates her way intelligently through the case to a successful ending. There were no major surprises but it was interesting to follow Claudine in her first attempt at sleuthing. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A Christmas book with such a cheery cover, should have a cheery story. This book did not. A murder takes place just before Christmas, what ensues is dark and hard to follow. While there were brief snippets of intrigue and interesting characters, this is not a book that held me spellbound, nor was it what I expected.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Winning a free copy of A Christmas Hope through the LibraryThing Early Reviewers made me happy because I've been a fan of Anne Perry's Victorian mysteries since I first read one about twenty years ago.
This one focuses on Claudine Burroughs, an unhappily-married, childless lady who has been a secondary character in the William Monk series since at least The Shifting Tide. The work Claudine does at Hester Monk's clinic for prostitutes is still the best part of her life. From what we get to see of her husband, Wallace, it's easy to understand why. It's November 1868 when the book starts. There are no medical tests to tell which member of the couple is infertile. Neither has committed adultery so far as Claudine knows, so there are no love children to answer the question.
If Claudine were living today, she could seek help for dealing with her verbally abusive husband. Sadly, her best prospect for a happier life, other than Wallace changing for the better, would be for him to die in an accident or of natural causes.
No, Wallace is not the murder victim in this book. That dubious honor goes to a young prostitute. Three young men, sons of three powerful families whom Wallace wishes to cultivate, say she was murdered by a Welsh poet known for his drinking and womanizing.
Wallace would be content for Treggaron to be caught and hanged, but Claudine doesn't believe him to be guilty. True, they met for only a few minutes shortly before the brawl in which the girl died, but Claudine was one of the first to the scene.
Now that Hester's husband is officially a policeman again, Claudine can't take this problem to them. Instead, she turns to Hester's Portspool Lane Clinic's bookkeeper, Squeaky Robinson.
I enjoyed Squeaky's reactions to the conventions of the gentry as he learns them from Claudine. The case seems hopeless, but they both investigate, Claudine amongst the gentry and Squeaky amongst the disreputable poor.
Two of my favorite scenes were the ones where Claudine really tells her husband off and the one where she tries to help a young lady avoid her own fate.
Yes, there is hope to be found in what seem to be hopeless situations during a pre-Christmas season over a century ago. I recommend this novel to Anne Perry fans and fans of historical mysteries in general. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I received this book as part of the Early Reviewers program. I have enjoyed several of Ms. Perry's other works, and looked forward to this short story. This is the first of her Christmas books I have had the pleasure to read.
Some of the characters in this book were familiar to me through the Monk series, but most of them were new. As usual Anne Perry wastes no time in painting a rather unpleasant picture of the differences between the gentry and the common people of Britain during the Victorian era. In this case a young street woman (harlot) is killed at a Christmas reception and three young gentlemen claim that a drunkard is guilty of murder. Mrs Burroughs, the protagonist, must find a way to bring the truth to light and bring the guilty party to justice regardless of what the social implications are for several of the characters, including herself and her husband.
Anne Perry does a wonderful job of making the quiet respectable women of Victorian England somehow become avenging angels in her books. This one is no exception. If you enjoy a quick pleasant read, this is a good choice. It is actually straight forward. There are no serious plot twists, just a good read. I look forward to reading some of her other Christmas books to see if they help pass a cold winter's evening by the fire. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It seems ungrateful to complain, since I received this book as an Early Reviewer, but winning the book in October and not receiving it til the middle of January takes some of the fun out of a 'Christmas' read. However, as several reviewers have pointed out, the book really has almost nothing to do with Christmas, so I shouldn't have worried about the seasonality. The book was a pleasant read, the heroine was appealing and the mystery was not terribly mysterious. I would feel safe in recommending it to Anne Perry fans.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This poignant Christmas tale is at once uplifting and heartbreaking. A diverse host of characters and an intricate plot will keep you turning pages. At a lavish party of genteel, well-to-do guests, a less than savory poet has been invited, and also a young woman of dubious background. A disagreement leads to a fight with tragic results. Now, the plot becomes secondary to the character studies that the author depicts. As Claudine becomes compelled to seek the truth of the matter, she realizes that while the truth may indeed set someone free, it will change forever the lives of innocent people, perhaps smearing their reputations in the process. The author does a masterful job of depicting the correctness of the times as well as the personalities of the characters. At what cost does one achieve happiness? And once thrown away, to please others but not yourself, can happiness ever come within one’s grasp again? These are some of the interesting topics the characters find themselves addressing. If there is a complaint about this tale, it’s that some story threads are not answered and we as readers are left hanging.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5As a fan of the Hester Monk series, I was pleased to receive an EarlyReaders copy of this book from LibraryThing. It is the latest in a series of Christmas novels the author has produced for the past 11years. This is light reading, good for the busy holiday season. Victorian England may appear beautiful to those who attend the society events but to Claudine Burroughs it is anything but beautiful. Working at Hester Monk's clinic has shown her the other side of life, especially for women. In this story Claudine champions a poet accused of murder. By doing so, she has to stand up to a husband and the societal group he belongs to. Not an easy task. Good story line. Lots of Victorian and Christmas atmosphere. A good look at the life of a woman/wife at that time and the life she must lead.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I won this book in an exchange for an honest review.
# 11 in Anne Perry's collection of Christmas stories, this story transports us to Victorian times where a murder has been committed.
A basic story of a murder committed in Victorian England. In this case, a ne'er-do-well is blamed for the crime and it is up to Claudine Burroughs to prove his innocence. No easy feat as she is trying to prove the guilt of 3 well known young aristocrats. This becomes a Christmas story because the crime occurs a few days before Christmas.
Ms. Perry does promote a strong Christian theme throughout this novella; emphasizing how she and the upper classes need to be more humane towards those beneath them, especially during that time of the year.
Claudine as a character is sadly out of place among her peers and suffers from an intolerable marriage. This factor is succinctly portrayed by the author. Claudine's husband is a boor, arrogant and intolerable so to get back at him, she takes on sleuthing.
The novel has a basic plot but since it's a novella the story is rushed so you don't develop a relationship with the characters.
I would have liked a longer story with more plot. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5First, I must say that I was a little frustrated by the fact that I won this book in the October drawing on LibraryThing, and the publisher didn't manage to get it mailed out until after Christmas. Which is a little strange to me, since a) it is a Christmas book, and b) TWO MONTHS? Really?
The book was fair. Had nothing to do with Christmas other than the fact that it was that time of year, and I found the mystery simple and solvable before I reached the end. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Calling this a Christmas story is a bit of a stretch. It's pretty much a little Victorian murder mystery novel that just so happens to take place during the holiday season.
Claudine and her husband (he's awful, a total wanker) attend an ill fated Christmas party where an un-virtuous young lady (i.e. prostitute) is murdered on the terrace . Things like this simply do not happen at high society parties. Three young man who were on the terrace claim that the drunken welch poet beat her to death, but Claudine thinks otherwise. She briefly talked to the poet earlier in the evening and although he may have been drunk he certainly didn't seem like a killer. Claudine vows to get to the bottom of this and discover who really murdered the girl. Quite a Christmas story eh?
For fans of historical mystery novels.
I received this book for free from Library Thing in return for my honest, unbiased opinion. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Predictable. Might be interesting if no one has read anything about Victorian England novels. I will pass on Anne Perry's next Christmas novel.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I've read many of her Thomas Pitt novels/detective stories. This is the first of her Christmas series. I started reading it yesterday afternoon and finished it when I arrived home from work today. What a delightful read. Her main character is one I would have enjoyed both in her day and today. Strong and moral woman with a good outlook on life. I do recommend this as a read anytime of the year. I plan on reading some of the prior Christmas tales.
I received this through the Early Reviewers program and am so greatful~!! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Christmas Hope is the first book that I have read by Perry, and I found that I really enjoyed it. I wasn't sure what to expect with this book, but since I was looking for a good holiday read this seemed to fit the bill. I really enjoyed Perry's writing style and setting of Victorian London. Perry also delivered a good mystery with Claudine trying to determine the truth about what happened the night Winnie was killed. Claudine was a well-developed character who was trying hard to make sure the wrong man didn't pay for a crime he didn't commit. I liked the character's strength of being willing to defy society and even her husband to get to the truth. I also enjoyed how Perry tied in current events with Claudine's past and regrets so that Claudine could deal with the choices she had made and impart wisdom to a young girl in the same situation. Overall A Christmas Hope was an enjoyable read that I would recommend to anyone who enjoys historical fiction, a good mystery, and a holiday tale.
Received a copy of A Christmas Hope through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Alas, either Anne Perry is running out of ideas for her Christmas novellas, or I'm becoming jaundiced, cynical and generally Scrooge-like.
This is an OK short mystery -- a whodunnit -- in which the main protagonist is a peripheral character from Perry's William Monk series, Claudine Burroughs, who works at Hester's clinic. She is one of those women whose intelligence goes unremarked in the world she inhabits, as she's no longer young and never was attractive; she's also childless and in a dull, tedious marriage to a rather unpleasant man. Then, she happens to be present at a holiday party, where she is charmed by one of the guests, a young man as out of place as she is -- and who is later accused of murdering a young woman, a streetwalker whom he has brought to the society gathering. She undertakes to clear him.
The upside of this is that Perry doesn't ask her readers to swallow the idea of an implausible romantic relationship between Claudine and the poet, Dai Tregarron. If she is charmed, it is by his wit, poetry and insight. The downside? Well, at this point, you probably have a reasonable idea of what the outcome will be if not whodunnit.
Unless you're addicted to the author & the Christmas books, I would say, don't bother with this one. It's not all that meaty, and the short length emphasizes the sometimes sententious tone that Perry no longer bothers to camouflage in convincing dialog and interesting plot twists. Far too much philosophy lite for so few pages. My view? Meh. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the first of the "Christmas stories" Anne Perry has written which I have read, though by the list inside the cover, she's been doing this a while. I enjoy her regular series about Monk and Hester, which present a gritty underbelly to Victorian London, as well as a wicked eye to the morals and mores of the time. This small novel, sent to me through the Library Thing early Reviewers program, was a little nugget of Victorian society, wrapped up with a Christmas bow.
Claudine Burroughs, who has grown to dislike both the Christmas season and her joyless marriage, finds herself in the wrong place at the wrong time to witness the end of a fight at one of the Christmas parties. A young woman "of the street" is severely injured, and one of the party attendees is accused by three others of harming her. When the woman dies, it becomes a question of murder. It also becomes a question of justice, as Claudine unravels what actually happened that evening.
There are illusions to Hester Monk's clinic, where Claudine happens to volunteer. Bits I liked, bits that are similar to other bits I've read in Perry's novels. But all in all, a fine period piece.
Many thanks to Library Thing and the publishers for sending this to me. It is my final completed read of 2013. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Yes, finally an enjoyable Christmas story than embellishes the spirit of the season. Perry writes a short, yet poignant story of honesty, courage, and forgiveness in Victorian England. Of course, Perry centers on the upper crust of English society, but she exposes the horror and unfairness of the dregs of society. The story focuses on Claudine Burroughs who has the gumption to fight for what she believes. This is only a Christmas novella, but the lessons and characters are endearing.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Anne Perry is my favourite author and I continue to read everything she's written. Her annual Christmas stories are a holiday treat for me. Every year I read them and every year I totally enjoy them. It's like being witness to a real Victorian Christmas. Each story focues on a minor character from one of Ms. Perry's two main series. This one focuses on Claudine Burroughs who is a well-to-do woman who works in Hester Monk's clinic for women in need. We are also given the treat of seeing Squeaky Robinson who is Hester's general factotum and a man of dubious talents and a thorough knowledge of the London underground. This book is set around Christmas in 1868. Claudine is an inadvertant observer of the death of an unfortunate young woman in the garden of one of the houses where she and her husband are attending a Christmas party. She is sure that the man that is being accused of the crime is not the perpetrator as he is just one of four men who were close by when it happened. Claudine pushes herself far past her comfort zone in trying to determine the truth of what happened on that late November night. She calls upon the afore-mentioned Squeaky to help her pursue the truth. This ill-matched pair manage to work together very satisfactorily, and an injustice is averted. These Christmas stories are so wonderful with the large dose of nostalgia they offer accompanied by more than a hint of crime that each provides.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5...truth and justice pursued! the power of hope revealed!
What a wonderful story. I have always liked Claudine Burroughs, a volunteer in Hester Monk’s clinic for sick and injured prostitutes. I like her pluck, her courage and her sense of fair play and justice. I cheer for the way she has stepped outside of the role society and her husband expects her to pursue, that of supportive wife and homemaker, of adhering to society's rules for women. She has taken up the cause of the less fortunate. In doing so she is receiving far more than she's gives, a sense of purpose. Life has become meaningful.
Wallace of course hates her charity work. It is not gentile enough for his social aspirations.
How I dislike her husband Wallace. A bully really who sees his wife as an extension of himself. To the point that Wallace dictates her in the wearing and buying of even her dresses. Her behaviour needs to support him ingratiate himself in society and up the ladder of business and success. Claudine's commentary on her marriage is quite devastating. One can see why in just a momentary meeting with the welsh poet, Dai Tregarron, Claudine decides to champion him.
In a tenderly reflective, nonsensical moment in the garden they had conversed. In a flight of poetic fantasy he had called her Olwen. Sadly Claudine realized that she liked that name better than her own.
There's been a murder! A young prostitute at that same high society party is beaten. She dies. Dai Is accused. Claudine believes that the Welshman is not the murderer. Yes, he is a drunkard and walks on the wild side but is not a murderer. Besides he likes women. Claudine's sights fall on the three society young men also present at the scene of the murder. Claudine enlists the aid of a reluctant Squeaky Robinson, and sets forth to right a wrong.
Along the way we gain further insights into Claudine, her marriage, her dashed hopes and her dreams. Claudine's strength is our hope, a hope for those reluctantly embroiled in this crime, and the personification of hope for the accused, Dai Tregorran.
A fitting Christmas tale and an excellent read!
A NetGalley ARC - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5There's nothing like an Anne Perry Christmas novella to start getting in the holiday spirit. At first blush, you wouldn't think so, as this is a book about a Victorian era society woman, Claudine Burroughs, trapped in a loveless marriage who finds satisfaction volunteering at a women's health clinic run by Hester Monk.
Claudine attends holiday parties, the opera, and other high society events and, at one of these, a young woman, said to be a streetwalker, is murdered. Three well-to-do young men accuse a Welsh poet of the murder and he's quickly on the run. Claudine sets out to try to prove the poet's innocence, while, at the same time, trying to impart lessons learned from her life to a young woman.
As is always true of the annual Christmas novella, the holiday lesson/takeaway is timeless.
Well done, as always.
Book preview
A Christmas Hope - Anne Perry
CLAUDINE BURROUGHS DID NOT LOOK FORWARD TO the party. This November of 1868 it had been bitterly cold, the kind of chill that creeps into one’s bones and makes them ache. Now it was early December and warm again. People were predicting the mild spell would last. Here in London there might not even be any snow! Most unseasonal.
Claudine regarded her face in the glass, not because she admired it, but because she must do the best with it that she could. She had never been pretty, and now in middle age she had not even the bloom of earlier years. She had strength, something not always admired in a woman; and character, also not necessarily cared for; but excellent hair, thick, shining, and with a natural wave. When her maid dressed it in a glamorous style, as she had this evening, it always stayed exactly where she wished. It was the one aspect of her appearance in which her husband, Wallace, had ever expressed his pleasure.
Not that that mattered to her anymore. He disapproved of too much that was at the core of her, like answering honestly when she was asked her political opinions—which were definitely more radical than most people’s. She laughed at the jokes it would have been more ladylike to pretend not to understand. And, despite Wallace’s disapproval, she worked at Hester Monk’s clinic for sick or injured prostitutes—voluntarily, of course; she had no need of money, and the clinic had none to offer. She had begun there looking for something better to fill her time with than endless committees. Now she loved it for the fellowship, the variety, and above all, the sense that she was doing something of genuine worth.
She looked away from the glass. There was nothing more to accomplish here. She stood up and, thanking her maid, went out onto the landing and down the stairs, walking carefully so as not to trip over the hem of her rich teal-green gown.
Wallace was standing in the hall with his coat on. He was a big man, more overweight than his expensive and skillfully cut suits allowed to show. The flicker of impatience on his heavy features told her that she had kept him waiting.
He made no remark, no compliment on her appearance, simply held her cape for her and then nodded to the footman as he followed her out of the front door. Their carriage had drawn up to the curb ready for them. The coachman must have known the address to which they were going because Wallace did not offer him any directions.
They did not speak on the journey. They had long ago run out of things to say to each other about life or feelings, and Claudine imagined he did not want to pretend any more than she did. There would be enough of that when they arrived. The other guests were all socially important, which was the reason for their going. Wallace was a successful investment adviser to several people of considerable importance, and she admitted that he deserved his success. Apart from being gifted, he worked very hard at cultivating all the right connections. He never failed in anything he regarded as his duty. It was the laughter, the gentleness, and the imagination he could not manage. Perhaps it was beyond his ability, as well as his nature. During rare moments, she hoped he was happier in their life than he had ever made her.
And yet, it would be graceless not to acknowledge that she had never gone without any of the physical comforts of life. She had never dreaded that a letter or a knock on the door would be a request to pay a debt she could not meet. He had never lied to her, so far as she was aware, never drank too much, never embarrassed her in public, and certainly had never been unfaithful. She sometimes thought she might have understood if he had been, possibly even forgiven him for it. It would have shown a quality of passion she had never felt him to possess. Instead of admiring his rigid tidiness, it infuriated her. He folded everything, even the discarded newspaper, matching the corners exactly. He put everything away where it belonged as soon as he finished using it.
But that was a self-defeating argument. If he had understood passion and loneliness, the same desperate hunger for warmth, then she might have loved him, despite everything else. She had tried to love him. But here they were.
At least she could behave with gratitude. She would do her part this evening: She would be gracious to the Foxleys and the Crostwicks, the Halversgates and the Giffords, and everyone else it was necessary to please.
They alighted at the entrance to the Giffords’ magnificent house. Forbes and Oona Gifford were wealthy enough to entertain in the most lavish style, and seating thirty to dinner was no effort to their staff. Claudine and Wallace were welcomed into the hall, relieved of their outer clothing, and shown into the first of the large reception rooms. They had timed it perfectly: not the last to arrive, which would be slightly ill-mannered or self-important, but very far from first, which made one appear overeager.
Oona was Forbes’s second wife, his first having died some ten years earlier. No one knew where Oona had lived before their marriage, and she never mentioned it, which was an interesting omission. She was very striking to look at, some might say truly beautiful. She came toward Wallace and Claudine now, her dark hair swept up luxuriantly and her slender gown the height of fashion. Wide crinolines were suddenly out. No one with the slightest pretensions to style would be seen in one.
Delightful of you to come,
Oona said with a smile. Thank you, so much. In spite of the clemency of the weather, Christmas will be upon us before we know it. Let us begin to celebrate as soon as we can, I say.
Indeed,
Wallace agreed, forcing a warmth Claudine knew he did not mean. What better way to begin the season?
He spotted Nigel Halversgate and moved toward him, realizing Nigel was standing with his wife, Charlotte—known as Tolly—only when it was too late to change course.
Oona saw what had happened and shot a surprisingly candid look of amusement at Claudine.
Beginning to gain the Christmas spirit, I see,
Oona said ambiguously.
Such a party is definitely the best place to do so,
Claudine replied, equally ambiguously. She was thinking of the discipline it took to be agreeable to a number of people she did not know very well or especially care for, but she certainly would not say so aloud.
Goodwill to all men,
Oona murmured under her breath. She sighed. And women.
Lifting her chin a little, she turned as Euphemia Crostwick approached, a delicately blond woman whose pretty face was always at attention, looking this way and that to be sure she missed nothing.
I’m sure you know Mrs. Burroughs,
Oona said, motioning toward Claudine.
Of course.
Eppy Crostwick smiled brightly. She looked up and down at Claudine’s dress; it was a very handsome one, but it certainly would have overwhelmed her own diminutive figure, and its dramatic coloring would have bleached her skin. It seems like ages since we last met,
she added, letting the underlying meaning hang in the air.
Indeed.
Claudine inclined her head, her good intentions already vanished. So much has happened. But surely it is one of the pleasures of life to be busy, don’t you think?
Eppy’s eyes widened. I had no idea you were … busy. Your charities, no doubt … You must tell me all about it
—she waved her hand delicately—sometime.
Of course,
Claudine agreed. I should be happy to. However, this is an evening to celebrate our own good fortune, rather than commiserate about the tragedies of others.
Eppy gave a sigh of relief, which was only a trifle forced. I’m sure you’d love to meet some of the other people here. You know Verena Foxley, of course. Such a good-looking boy, Creighton, don’t you think?
They all looked over at the Foxleys. Claudine did agree that Creighton Foxley was handsome enough, if not quite as superb as he himself imagined—but then, Eppy had not really meant it to be a question. It was an opening for Claudine, who had no children herself—another way in which she had disappointed Wallace—to argue that Eppy’s son, Cecil, was just as distinguished, in his own way. Actually, Cecil was very ordinary looking, but one did not say such things, for Cecil and Creighton were good friends. Occasionally Ernest Halversgate tagged along with them, half disapproving most of the time but reluctant to say so in case he found himself excluded.
Claudine took a deep breath. Very handsome, in a certain way,
she agreed. But there are others perhaps a little more … interesting to look at, don’t you think?
She smiled as she said it, allowing her implication to be understood.
Eppy was satisfied. I do so agree. Have you heard that Lady Lyall is to be married … again? The woman is quite …
She searched for a word.
Extraordinary,
Claudine supplied. It was the perfect cover-all word for disapproval that could never be quoted against you. Its entire meaning depended upon the expression with which you said it, the degree of uplift in the voice.
And so the early part of the evening progressed: a series of encounters with people Claudine had met on scores of other such occasions, from a world she used to be part of. But since her work in the clinic and her introduction to a different reality, it felt more alien than ever. Did she look as strange and lost as she felt? The thought occurred to her that perhaps everyone felt the same, in their own way; as if each of them were trapped in his or her own little bubble, jostling and bumping with others but never breaking through.
No, that was complete nonsense. There was Tolly Halversgate, elegant in the extreme of fashion, wearing a shade of purple-pink no one else would get away with. She was imparting some confidence to an elderly woman Claudine knew had a title of some sort, but she could not remember what. Countess or marchioness of somewhere. Tolly was a great royalist, always looking upward.
Lambert Foxley was talking business with a couple of hearty men at least ten years older than he. Both of them nodded to emphasize a point.
A couple of girls laughed just a shade too loudly, attracting the disapproval of their mothers, and the interest of several young men.
It was all colored silk, chatter, the glitter of lights from chandeliers, and lots of laughter.
Instead of mingling her way through the crowd again, as Wallace would have expected of her, Claudine turned away and walked through a garden room. At the far side she opened the French doors onto the terrace and stepped out. It was extraordinarily pleasant: a wide paved area extending all the way to the wall bordering the street. There were flower beds—bare now, of course, but no doubt full of daffodils or hyacinths come spring. There were also ornamental stone tubs at different heights, giving a most agreeable variety, and several attractive holly bushes. The terrace was overlooked by the windows of at least two of the neighboring houses, but they were all dark, leaving Claudine with an agreeable sense of solitude.
It was at that exact moment she realized with a jolt that she was not actually alone. Half in the shadows between the soft glow from the Giffords’ lighted windows, there was a man standing watching her. For an instant she was frightened. Then, when she realized he could only have come from the party, since there was no other way to reach the terrace, she was merely annoyed.
Good evening, sir,
she said coldly. "I apologize if I am interrupting you. I did not see