I have about a hundred pages to go in reading this novel (I finished it now, and still my review holds true!), but, baring any crazy changes in the progress of this story, it is safe to say this is an outstanding and smart debut. The Secrets of Hartwood Hall is everything it is billed. An atmospheric and Gothic homage to the genre so popular in Victorian times.
I recently read Hester Fox’s The Last Heir of Blackwood Library, and while they both achieve a wonderful sense of time and place in a Gothic setting, The Secrets of Hartwood Hall kept my rapt attention, the former petered out for me. This book kept me coming back for more!
Ms. Lumsden’s creation of her main character is topnotch. Just the smallest addition of her deafness in one ear made her character stand out all the more and added to the suspense, never knowing was it ghosts and spirits she heard, or just her poor hearing. I found myself cheering for Margaret to succeed and cared about what happened to her. And I constantly kept trying to read between the lines to discover some secret, but the author artfully avoided giving out too much detail until needed, and then it would hit me, and I found yourself shaking my head in agreement to the added plot point as if I knew it was coming. I didn’t. And neither will you. Nor will you see the ending!
Quite frankly, I’m a little confused as the mixed reviews on Goodreads for this novel. It is well-written. It kept me deeply interested. I couldn’t wait to get back to it each time I set it down. The author expertly drops tiny snippets that spur the reader onward, turning one page after another. I’m not a fan of first person stories, and yet, I think the voice of the main character, Margaret Lennox, telling the story actually helped add to the building suspense of the novel. So why the slightly more than mid-range of ratings and reviews (as of the date of this review)? Ms. Lumsden has created a eerie—bumps in the night, the occasional creak of a floorboard, a glimmer of something not quite a ghost, but perhaps is—but not spooky story I enjoyed, so I’m not sure what the answer is.
Along that line, I have an admission. I came close to not reading this novel. Why? The ratings and reviews. They were all over the map. I usually look for key things in reviews and this one ticked all the right boxes for me. And yet, I added it to my future possible reads and ignored it. I almost deleted it a couple of times. But when I saw it at my library recently, I snatched it up. I groaned at first that it was first person. Have I mentioned my dislike for first person narration? But I gave it a try. Others recently worked for me that I’d read. Why not this one? As for those mixed reviews and ratings… Trust me. This is a fine example of why a reader should only take the reviews they read about any book at face value. Know the reviewers you read. Some hate everything; some love everything. Most fall in between. Everyone has different things they like. As with movies, I often like things others don’t. I almost missed this one, and it would have been a loss. Glad I went with my gut and read it anyway.
!⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️!