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Jane Whitefield #10

The Tree of Light and Flowers

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Jane Whitefield is used to protecting vulnerable people, but after she gives birth, the fugitives she must rescue are her own family.


A violent car crash brings on the premature birth of the baby that Jane Whitefield and her husband have hoped for, but it also shatters the period of calm in their lives like an earthquake triggering a tectonic shift.


Within weeks, Jane’s peaceful time as a new mother in a safe, harmonious home starts to revert to her harrowing previous life. She had spent over a decade rescuing and sheltering people from dangerous foes, taking them to new locations, and teaching them to live under new identities. It was something that she’d hoped to never have to do again.


Nearly simultaneously, as though the events were connected, people who are thousands of miles apart in vastly different circumstances start to move. Some of them are in terrible need of help finding a route to safety. Some are dedicated to serving justice. Others are determined to capture the woman who makes people disappear so they can force her to reveal where their potential victims are now. All of these travelers are soon on their way to the old house in western New York.


Suddenly the people requiring Jane’s special skills include not only multiple fugitives, but also Jane herself, her husband, and their newborn, as the danger she faces comes from people who know how to find her. She’ll need to use everything she’s ever learned in order to survive.

304 pages, Hardcover

Published March 3, 2026

204 people are currently reading
6260 people want to read

About the author

Thomas Perry

61 books1,726 followers
Thomas Perry was the author of 25 novels. He was born in Tonawanda, New York in 1947. He received a B.A. from Cornell University in 1969 and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Rochester in 1974. He had worked as a park maintenance man, factory laborer, commercial fisherman, university administrator and teacher, and as a writer and producer of prime time network television shows.

Thomas Perry lived in Southern California.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 69 reviews
Profile Image for Donna Davis.
1,960 reviews328 followers
March 20, 2026
The Tree of Light and Shadows is the eleventh entry in the iconic Jane Whitefield series by Thomas Perry. My thanks go to NetGalley and The Mysterious Press for the review copy. This book is for sale now.

For those unfamiliar, Jane Whitefield is a Seneca Indian woman with a past avocation of helping people that need to disappear. The person in question might be a woman running from an abusive relationship; an innocent person that’s inadvertently run afoul of the mafia or some other dangerous group or individual; or someone that has been wrongfully convicted of a crime. Jane combines her Native tracking skills with modern methods of blending in or hiding away. However, in recent years she’s given it up, eschewing the danger for a normal life with her husband, who is a physician, and their baby girl, May in Amherst, New York.

However, the universe has other plans for her right now. Clare, a young Indian girl who has stabbed her rapist, has learned that she is wanted for murder. The dead man was Caucasian, and he moved in powerful circles. Knowing she is unlikely to get a fair shake in an Oklahoma courtroom, she heads for New York to find the distant relative that she’s heard will help people like her.

At the same time, a Russian woman named Magda has been hired by someone with a vendetta to find and kill Jane.

The dual storylines are deftly handled, which doesn’t surprise me, since our author is Thomas Perry. But there is one misstep that happens early on that niggles at me for the rest of the book. When Clare finds Jane, Jane decides the girl is too young to be established on her own, so she tells her husband that she wants Clare to remain with them. Clare will go to school and help with the baby. And then—here it comes—she runs out to do errands and leaves the baby with Clare! Would someone as seasoned and astute as Jane leave her infant daughter in the care of someone that might be attacked by people from her past, and do so before the girl has been in her home for even 48 hours? I find this so jarring that I am unable to entirely forget about it for the duration of the novel.
Nevertheless, the book holds my interest, and I look forward to my session reading it each day. When the conclusion is near, I can’t walk away from it until I see how it ends. This doesn’t happen often. I am lucky enough to have been given access to both the audio and digital review copies. I haven’t been able to learn who the narrator is, but whoever he is, he’s good.

I just read of Perry’s sudden death while writing this review. He was such a force within the world of mystery writers that I can hardly believe it. While this book wasn’t the best thing he ever wrote, it is still quite good.
Profile Image for Elaine.
1,505 reviews51 followers
March 4, 2026
So I believe this is the first I’ve read from this author… and unfortunately, I learned that he recently passed… so I won’t be reading any new material. Very sad…

Also, this is part of a series… I believe it was book #11. So I was a bit lost initially and felt like I was missing parts, but soon felt caught up…so, if you haven’t read any others in the series…you should be ok.

Jane is a tough woman. She has helped MANY people find themselves again. After a horrible death, a traumatic experience… or for any number of reasons that people might need to start over again. She is the one to seek out!
AND, she knows the people to hook you up with all the info you might need along the way! Kind of like witness protection… but way off the grid!

But… she’s married and has recently had a baby. Sweet Baby Mae. So, she’s decided that THIS LIFE is now in her rear view mirror. From here on out it’s all about her, hubby and Baby Mae.

But, as we all know, things don’t always go as planned…. And a young, teenage girl comes to her for help, after a tragic event in her life. One that she’s not sure she’ll ever get through, over, or be able to forget…
And so, Kate is re-born. And she’s now helping Jane with the baby…

But of course, it doesn’t end there. She gets word from an old friend/contact that people have moved in to her old home… and they think that a young boy went there for help ( from her)… and they might be holding him hostage. And so, it seems that she’s fully roped in to that life, again. Because she HAS TO save the boy, and, find out exactly what’s going on!

This was a remarkable story with a major bass-ass FMC! And, I love that her husband is a surgeon… and accepts the fact that this is her life… and she NEEDS to help people out!

Loved the close knit characters who all care deeply for each other, even when they don’t see each other very often. And I loved how Kate became such a huge part of their family!

This was sweet, sassy, heartbreaking, terrifying and so much more!
Again, sad that this was his last book. 😕🙏🏼

#TheTreeOfLightAndFlowers (Jane Whitefield #11) by @ThomasPerry and narrated by @JoyceBean.

*** THIS ONE WAS RELEASED TODAY!!! *** 3/3/26! *** So, look for it on shelves now!!

Thanks so much to #NetGalley, @HighbridgeAudio and @Highbridge for an ALC of the audiobook in exchange for an honest review!!

You can also find my reviews on: Goodreads,
Instagram: @BookReviews_with_emsr and/or
My Facebook Book Club: Book Reviews With Elaine

Thanks so much for reading! And if you ‘liked’ my review, please share with your friends, & click ‘LIKE’ below… And, let me know YOUR thoughts if you read it!! 📚⭐️
Profile Image for Stacy40pages.
2,316 reviews176 followers
February 11, 2026
The Tree of Light and Flowers by Thomas Perry. Thanks to @penzlerpub for the gifted Arc ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Jane Whitefield has just had a baby and is turning away from her previous life of sheltering women on the run from dangerous people. Unfortunately one of those dangerous people aren’t done with her, and Jane now needs to not only protect herself but her family as well.

While part of the Jane Whitefield series, you can definitely read this as a standalone. I’ve read a few of the books but in no particular order. The story tells you enough of the background as it goes and you know immediately the important part; that Jane Whitefield is a major badass. After a few chapters, the excitement starts and it doesn’t let go. The chapters fly by. I’d say I would be looking forward to the next one, except unfortunately Thomas Perry passed away in September last year. He certainly left a legacy and there are plenty of books to read that he left us.

“A few people who break laws do it for good reasons, but not many. Others will take what you have and leave you dead.”

Read if you like:
-Bad ass female characters
-Past Jane Whitefield novels
-Fast paced action thrillers
-Women vigilantes

The Tree of Light and Flowers comes out 3/3.
Profile Image for Kristine.
3,545 reviews53 followers
March 16, 2026
I have been a fan of the Jane Whitefield series for many years and I just realized that there was a new book that had dropped in the series. I like to alternate between the audio version and the print version and this is one time that I was very glad that I did because the print version contained some information that was not included in the audio version.

There were two letters at the end of the story - one from the author, Thomas Perry and another from his wife of 45 years. Apparently, Mr. Perry recently passed away so this book is truly the end of the Jane Whitefield series and it was done in a way that gave the readers some wonderful closure.

For those readers who have followed Jane throughout her life, to see her where she is at this point - happily married and with a new baby - it is a long way from where we first met her.

Unfortunately, there are people and things from her past that have not stayed dead. Jane has several disasters that all congregate at the same time making this a non stop thriller from beginning to end.

Thank you Mr. Perry for the wonderful world that you created.
Profile Image for Debra.
1,290 reviews20 followers
September 27, 2025
Wow, what a treat, another Jane Whitefield adventure!. Jane is of course married, but now she has a little one in her life too, their daughter May. Life is going along pretty well and then someone needs her help, then the people who tried to take her three years ago return and a second person needs help. Jane has to maneuver with all these parties and move her own family while she tries to work things out.

This book was almost impossible to put down. It starts out with a car accident and then just keeps on rolling. Very suspenseful and there were moments that had me holding my breath. You are going to have to read it to see how or if things work out and for whom. This was a really good book. I tried to not read it to fast, but that was impossible.

I would like to thank The Mysterious Press and NetGalley for this ARC.
Profile Image for Pattyh.
1,029 reviews
September 27, 2025
Thank you for the opportunity to preview The Tree of light and Flowers.
It is with sadness to recognize the passing of Thomas Perry recently. He is an author that always provided a book filled with great insight and inspiration as well as mystery and suspense.
This book follows my favorite hero Jane Whitfield a Seneca Indian woman who makes people in trouble disappear.
In this book Jane helps a young woman accused of murder while having to disappear herself from some really bad people.
A cross country flight keeps Jane running for her life and the life of her family.
This is a terrifying situation for Jane as she now has a baby to care for.
Can she outrun while keeping herself alive because she’s not alone anymore. Her family is everything to her.
Excellent! 5 stars
Profile Image for Margaret.
170 reviews6 followers
March 18, 2026
I love Thomas Perry's books, and hadn't heard about his death until this week. This book seems appropriate, closing the door on his and Jane's legacy.
Profile Image for Ray Palen.
2,058 reviews57 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 7, 2026
THE FINAL JANE WHITFIELD NOVEL.

These were the words that hit me when I turned to look at the back cover of THE TREE OF LIGHT AND FLOWERS by Thomas Perry. Regrettably, we lost Thomas on September 15, 2025, at the age of 78, so I knew this day was coming. I do not know if he had any other works in the hopper for future release at the time of his passing, but I gingerly opened the pages of this novel with the intention of savoring the experience of his writing for possibly the last time.

Stunning imagery from a passage of a novel called The Death and Rebirth of the Senca by Anthony F.C. Wallace provides symbolic references that are quite evident as readers dive into this story. In particular, there are the descriptions of a tree that is to be the new home for an unnamed female who is to become the mother of all-beings. This chilling and insightful passage will remain in your psyche as you read this final Jane Whitfield novel and the journey she herself is on within it.

To begin with, Jane is very pregnant and is involved in a car accident where her vehicle is struck from behind and driven off road into a tree. This collision brings on immediate labor as she is rushed to the hospital to save the life of both she and her unborn child. We next meet a Russian inmate of a woman’s prison named Magda who is part of an elaborate scheme to break her out of jail and set her on the path of locating the woman named Jane Whitfield whom her nefarious benefactors seek revenge upon.

The third principle character in this story on a different path to Jane Whitfield is a teen-ager named Clare Markham who had been raped and abused by an attacker. She has heard of the Native American woman named Jane Whitfield in the Buffalo, New York, area and knows she must get on a series of buses to make her way to her as she has been told that Jane is the only one who can help her and the unborn and unwanted child she currently carries.

Clare completes her journey from Oklahoma to upstate New York and does indeed locate Jane Whitfield, who is busy with her newborn daughter named May. Jane will provide the same service she has in the past for wayward souls who find her and need both protection and a new identity to hide from those that might seek to harm them. The issue, as readers are well aware, is that the third party in this three-pronged tale, Magda, will also be able to find Jane Whitfield and the confrontation could be deadly for all involved.

Magda is backed by some highly dangerous Russian operatives who not only protect her but provide her with all the resources necessary to make her own journey to upstate New York for the inevitable showdown. Thomas Perry, who always had a way with words, is able to describe the events that led to this showdown with troubling accuracy that provides the suspense behind this tale.

Jane remains true to her mantra of helping others who seek to become a new person and have the chance to start over free of the problems that prevented them in their previous life. It was her commitment to this that put her on the spectrum of dangerous people like Magda and her benefactors, who now seek information from Jane about someone she helped in the past. THE TREE OF LIGHT AND FLOWERS is a cathartic tale for all the characters involved and shows how the important and kind work which Jane Whitfield has dedicated her life can become tainted by the evil and violent nature of the world around her. Thomas Perry and his unique storytelling, along with his great characters, will indeed be missed.

Reviewed by Ray Palen for Book Reporter
Profile Image for Carole Barker.
823 reviews32 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 3, 2026
This time her rescue mission is as personal as it gets

For years Jane Whitefield has been someone who assists those in need of disappearing to do so, helping them to escape bad situations, evade the dangerous people who wish them harm, establish new identities and learn to live as an entirely different person. She is one of the best "guides" (as she likes to think of herself) that there is, and has no qualms about doing whatever needs to be done in order to guide those she rescues to safety. But her personal life of late has changed; she has a husband now and a brand new baby, and consequently has much more to lose if things go wrong. When a young Native girl, on the run since a man (brother to a cop) tried to rape her and she killed him in defending herself, arrives in search of Jane and her services Jane can't refuse to help her. She brings the girl into her home as a live-in babysitter, telling her husband what she thinks he needs to hear rather than the truth of the girl's circumstances. But another person in need of Jane's services arrives soon after, just as an adversary from Jane's past also comes to town looking to settle scores. Jane now has to protect not just the two people who came to her for help from those who are tracking them; she has to protect her husband, her baby daughter and herself from the Russian criminal with whom she has unfinished business at the same time. Can she keep everyone safe, or is she going to have to make some difficult choices and live with the consequences?
This is the tenth and final novel in author Thomas Perry's series featuring Jane Whitefield, the daughter of a Seneca father and a white mother who possesses an innate ability to help people disappear. It is also the final installment in the series, the author having passed away last year just after completing the novel. Jane is an interesting protagonist, a smart and savvy woman who uses the skills she has learned and developed over the years alongside her knowledge of Native customs and traditions to aid innocent people in danger to escape and create new lives. Her husband knows of her activities but does not wholly approve of them, particularly as they frequently put her life in danger (and do not always stay within legal boundaries). She has been enjoying this new stage of her life, more focused on the domestic than the dangerous, but must suddenly cope with her family being the hunted when a past foe tracks her down. The suspense quickly builds and Jane needs every bit of ingenuity and survival skills to bring about a happy ending for those she loves. It can easily be read as a standalone, but readers of the series will particularly enjoy this tension-filled ending to a solid series. Those who enjoy Lee Child, Gregg Hurwitz and Harlan Coben should give this novel, and the series as a whole, a try. I found it a well-crafted finale to an excellent series, and thank NetGalley and Penzler Publishers/Mysterious Press for allowing me access to the novel in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Bookreporter.com Mystery & Thriller.
2,709 reviews59.5k followers
March 8, 2026
THE FINAL JANE WHITEFIELD NOVEL

These were the words that hit me when I turned to the back cover of THE TREE OF LIGHT AND FLOWERS. Sadly, we lost Thomas Perry in September 2025 at the age of 78, so I knew this day was coming. I gingerly opened the pages of this novel with the intention of savoring the experience of his writing for possibly the last time.

Stunning imagery from a portion of THE DEATH AND REBIRTH OF THE SENECA by Anthony F. C. Wallace provides symbolic references that are quite evident as readers dive into the story. In particular, there are the descriptions of a tree that will be the new home for an unnamed female who is to become the mother of all beings. This chilling and insightful passage will remain in your psyche as you read this final Jane Whitefield novel and the journey she is on.

To begin with, Jane is very pregnant and is involved in a car accident that causes her vehicle to be driven off the road and into a tree. The collision brings on immediate labor as she is rushed to the hospital to save the lives of both her and her unborn child.

We then meet Magda Kaprovna, a Russian inmate at a women’s prison who is part of an elaborate scheme to break out of jail and hunt down Jane, upon whom her nefarious benefactors seek revenge.

The third principal character is 16-year-old Clare Markham, who thwarted an attempted rape by stabbing her attacker. She has heard of Jane, who is in the Buffalo, New York, area, and knows that she must get on a series of buses to make her way to her. She has been told that Jane is the only one who can help get her life back on track.

Clare does indeed locate Jane, who is busy with her newborn daughter, May. Jane will provide the same service she has in the past for wayward souls who find her and need both protection and a new identity to hide from those who might seek to harm them. The issue, as readers are well aware, is that Magda is also looking for Jane, and the confrontation could be deadly for all involved.

Magda is backed by some highly dangerous Russian operatives who not only protect her but provide her with all the resources necessary to make her own journey to upstate New York for the inevitable showdown. Perry, who always had a way with words, is able to describe the events that lead to this faceoff with troubling accuracy, which intensifies the suspense.

Jane remains true to her mantra of helping others who wish to start over free of the problems that hampered them in their previous life. It is this commitment that puts her on the spectrum of dangerous people like Magda and her benefactors, who now seek information from her about certain people she has assisted.

THE TREE OF LIGHT AND FLOWERS is a cathartic tale for all involved and shows how the important and kind work to which Jane Whitefield has dedicated her life can become tainted by the evil and violent nature of the world around her. Thomas Perry and his unique storytelling, along with his great characters, will be missed.

Reviewed by Ray Palen
Profile Image for Pam Elliott.
94 reviews10 followers
November 17, 2025
I am so sorry to read that Thomas Perry died suddenly on Sept. 15th this year. He has been one of my favorite mystery authors since the early 1990’s. His series on Jane Whitefield is a classic and has won Perry many awards over the years. You might know him as the author of stand-alones such as The Old Man which was a TV series starring Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow in 2022.

And I DO love Perry’s stand-alone novels as well. But for me the best of his legacy will be the Jane Whitefield series of ten books. The latest, and unfortunately, the last, Jane Whitefield book will come out posthumously in March of 2026.

The Tree of Light and Flowers wraps up the Whitefield storyline which began in 1994 when Jane, a Seneca woman who helps people to disappear and obtain new identities, first was introduced in Vanishing Act. Jane works as guide again, and for the last time in Tree of Light and Flowers, when a teenage girl seeks her help from arrest after the teen killed her well-connected rapist. Jane has a new baby now, and she has a gang of crooks after her for the knowledge she holds of the 30 years of hiding people with secrets. Jane’s peaceful time as a new mother abruptly comes to an end.

I will miss Thomas Perry’s writings. He was one of the very best in the mystery genre. Perry won the Edgar Award in 1983 for his very first novel, The Butcher’s Boy. Vanishing Act was chosen as one of the the "100 Favorite Mysteries of the Century" by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association and was included in Parade's list of "101 Best Mystery Books of All Time."

Time changed and Jane Whitefield had to come up with new ways to disappear people, but she always did – even when technology took away many of her ways of cheating the system. If you haven’t read the first nine Jane Whitefield books, consider starting with Vanishing Act. I know you will love this series as I have. If you are caught up, then say goodbye to Thomas Perry and Jane Whitefield with the wonderful -- The Tree of Light and Flowers.

My rating: 5 of 5

This ARC title was provided by Netgalley.com at no cost, and I am providing an unbiased review. The Tree of Light and Flowers will be published on March 2, 2026.
Profile Image for J Kromrie.
2,574 reviews49 followers
November 23, 2025
Thanks to Penzler Publishing and Netgalley for this eARC.

Thomas Perry’s The Tree of Light and Flowers is a tense, emotionally layered addition to the Jane Whitefield series, blending the urgency of survival with the intimate challenges of family.

🌌 The novel opens with a violent car crash that shatters Jane Whitefield’s fragile peace, plunging her back into the dangerous world she thought she had left behind.

Perry’s prose is taut and immersive, creating a mood where domestic calm collides with sudden peril.

The tone balances suspense with emotional resonance, making the reader feel both the adrenaline of pursuit and the vulnerability of new parenthood.

👤 Jane Whitefield, long known for guiding fugitives to safety, now faces her most personal case: protecting her own family. Her husband and newborn child are drawn into the narrative not as passive figures but as catalysts for Jane’s return to her harrowing skills.

- Secondary characters—friends, enemies, and those caught in between—are shaded with Perry’s trademark ambiguity, forcing Jane (and the reader) to question trust at every turn.

🔍 Family and survival form the novel’s core, with Jane’s maternal instincts colliding with her professional expertise.

Perry explores the tension between identity and concealment, asking whether a life built on secrecy can ever truly be safe.

This story interrogates how trauma reshapes both memory and belonging, showing that even joy (like the birth of a child) can be shadowed by danger.

🎧 Perry structures the novel with deliberate pacing, weaving moments of quiet domesticity with bursts of action.

The narrative mirrors Jane’s fractured state—caught between the desire for peace and the inevitability of conflict.
His prose is precise yet evocative, grounding suspense in emotional stakes rather than spectacle.

⭐ The Tree of Light and Flowers is both a gripping thriller and a meditation on the cost of protection. By placing Jane’s own family at the center of the danger, Perry raises the emotional intensity of the series to new heights. It’s a novel that reminds readers that safety is never permanent, and that even the most skilled protector must confront the vulnerabilities of love.
31 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
February 16, 2026
I received this book as part of a free promotion. All opinions are my own. 4.5 out of 5 rounded up

The Tree of Light and Flowers introduces readers to Jane Whitefield, a woman who appears to have it all — a loving husband, a supportive family, and a new baby girl named May. On the surface, she seems like a typical suburban wife and mother. But Jane has a past — and it’s not one that stays buried for long.

Before settling into family life, Jane made a name for herself helping people disappear. Now, that past is catching up to her. Some people are searching for her because they desperately need her help. Others are hunting her for far more dangerous reasons. As the story unfolds, it becomes clear that Jane can’t simply walk away from who she used to be.

I really enjoyed this book. This is my first time reading Thomas Perry, and it definitely won’t be my last. While the pacing starts off a bit slow, it quickly gains momentum as multiple storylines begin to intertwine. We follow a young girl accused of murder, a man fleeing his former boss, and a group of Russians trying to track Jane down to profit from the secrets she holds. Watching these threads gradually collide kept me hooked.

What makes the story especially compelling is the tension between Jane’s past and her present. She’s not just protecting clients anymore — she’s protecting her husband and newborn daughter. The stakes feel personal, and that emotional layer adds real weight to the suspense.

If you enjoy thrillers with strong, intelligent female leads and layered plots that build toward explosive confrontations, this one is worth picking up. I’m already looking forward to reading more from this author.
3,379 reviews34 followers
March 7, 2026
The Tree of Light and Flowers by Thomas Perry is a thriller. In my mind, to make a thriller viable, one must care about the protagonist. Without caring, the thriller is somewhat empty chases. In this case, the protagonist is Jane, who helps people disappear; people who do not quality for government help. She has been successful for years, although it is getting more difficult, with technology and all. Her newest client is Clare Markham, a young woman who had accidentally killed a man as he was trying to rape her, with his own weapon. The problem was that he was a son of the local gentry and she was a sixteen year old Native American. The cards were stacked against her. The book opens with Jane getting in a car accident, which brought on early labor. She had married a man she loved, a doctor, and now they had a daughter. She had more people to worry about.

Someone wanted to find her. To kill her? Maybe. As it turns out, so they could torture her and get the names of people she had relocated so they could sell them to whomever was looking for them. It is a chase the entire time, but an interesting one. This is a woman who can take care of herself. We see it time and time again. She is also loyal as are the people she helps. A sixteen year old can not be relocated so Jane and Carey took on the responsibility of seeing her educated and ready for relocation down the road. Magna has been paid to capture Jane. She is smart. But, not quite as smart as Jane. This was a chase. Dead bodies. It was a good one: cleverly written with a totally engaging protagonist. I recommend it.

I was invited to read The Tree of Light and Flowers by Penzler Publishers. All thoughts and opinions are mine. #Netgalley #PenzlerPublishers #ThomasPerry #TheTreeOfLightAndFlowers
406 reviews
December 6, 2025
The Tree of Light and Flowers is in the highly popular Jane Whitefield series, one of the few series prolific writer Thomas Perry wrote over his long and distinguished career. The old saying "the devil is in the details" aptly describes a Jane Whitefield gripping thriller. Perry describes every careful step Jane must take to ensure the person (a runner) escaping a dangerous situation is truly disappeared forever from the chaser. It’s amazing how much work and expense is required to totally remake a person into someone that can’t be found. For years Jane has been guiding innocent people caught in life or death situations. Jane excels at developing for the runner a new detailed background, leaving no detail untouched, and then schools the runner on all phases of their fabricated backstory and how to handle their new lives in the future.

Jane, married with a child, has given up being a guide for those in desperate of help. To her dismay she unexpectedly finds herself once again in several potentially fatal situations as she is determined to protect and disappear two runners seeking her help. In addition a group of Russian thugs hired to find and capture Jane are given limitless funds to track her down and bring her in. Along with the two runners Jane and her family have become targets. Jane uses all her disappearing skills, calm under pressure demeanor, and creative MacGyver like thinking to keep herself, family, and runners safe. This gripping thriller is Thomas Perry at his best and a fitting finish to the Jane Whitefield saga. It’s a must read.

My thanks to The Mysterious Press and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this outstanding publication.

Profile Image for Jeff.
366 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 19, 2026
“The Tree of Light and Flowers” by Thomas Perry is the 10th novel in the Jane Whitefield series. Jane makes people disappear. You come to her in need; she helps you get away with a new identity. The story is really good.

However, I’m reviewing the audiobook. And therein lies the problem. To me, the story is a solid 4, with leanings towards a 4.5. The audiobook, not so much.

The audiobook is narrated by Joyce Bean. Her voice is pleasing to listen to, when she speaks in normal voice. However, decisions were made by someone that took me out of the story and just flat out irritated me.

When she is voicing a 16-year-old runaway, she sounds like every voice actor playing a 5- to 6-year-old girl. It made the character intolerable to listen to. And then there is the portrayal of Jane Whitefield, our protagonist. The narrator speaks in a very simplistic English when voicing Jane. Almost as if she is an adult trying to explain something to a small child (or Oscar explaining something to Michael Scott). It is almost a broken English in how Jane is voiced. But then later, when Jane is talking with a forger and his wife who are native American as Jane is, I realized they were being voiced the same way. I started focusing on the words (instead of the narration) to see if all native American characters were written in an old school stereotype. They were not. So, this means that this was a choice by the narrator or someone producing her. It ruined a good book.

If you want to consume this content, focus on the book, not the audiobook.

I received this ARC from NetGalley and the publisher in exchange for an unbiased review.
279 reviews6 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 4, 2026
So this was my first Jane Whitefield book. I requested this ARC without realizing it was part of a larger series. After finishing it, I think it does quite well as a standalone actually! I didn't feel like I was without knowledge that would've changed how I felt about the book overall. There was definite backstory I wish I would've known more about, but it was 100% not necessary to enjoy this one. If nothing else, it has me wanting to go back and read the series from the start.

Now onto the book itself - I felt like this one had great character development and enough action to keep me engrossed the entire time. This was a quick, easy, engaging read that fans of the author's other works and/or thrillers in general will certainly love. I thought the end of the book wrapped up nicely - especially if this is it for the series due to Mr. Perry's recent death.

Thanks to Net Galley and Penzler Publishers for this ARC! #TheTreeofLightandFlowers #NetGalley
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,281 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 24, 2026
I have enjoyed many of the books in the Jane Whitefield series and this book is not different. I will say that I am sorry to see that this is the end of the series especially since Mr. Perry passed away.

This installment that can be read as a standalone as all of the other books in this series. It starts with Jane being in a car accident and giving birth to her can Cary's daughter. As she settles into motherhood she ends up taking in a new runner who is a teenager but unfortunately her past catches up with her and she has to go on the run with her small family while she takes care of the people that are after her.

This is a typical Jane Whitefield novel where there is a lot of travel and a lot of secrets. She also has a lot on the line and does everything in her power to keep those close to her safe. This is a suspenseful read that I enjoyed from start to finish. I would recommend this book and this series to others.
Profile Image for Viccy.
2,262 reviews4 followers
March 12, 2026
Jane Whitefield has spent her life helping people disappear, the vulnerable, the people who can't go to the police. In recent years, however, she has tried to stay away for it, for the sake of her husband, Corey and, now that she is pregnant, she wants to protect her own child. But when a very scared teenager shows up on her doorstep, she has to help. The only problem is that Jane is being hunted by a Russian syndicate, one that she bested years ago. The hunter is back and she will not be denied. Jane and Corey and Clare (now Katie) have to go on the run. Jane has always known this might happen, she has bug-out bags ready to go. She just never thought it would happen while she was pregnant and a lonely scared teenager would be along for the ride. It will take all of Jane's hard-earned knowledge and strength to get through this disappearance. As always, Perry takes us through a harrowing ride. The reader learns more about the Seneca way of life, which has played an increasing role in recent Whitefield books. I will miss Jane and Perry's other odd characters. Thomas Perry was a very nice man and an entertaining writer; he will be missed.
760 reviews5 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 1, 2026
Jane Whitefield has settled into married life with her husband and baby daughter. Her quiet life is interrupted by the sudden appearance of a female teenager in need of her special services. As she works on setting up a new life for the girl, her life is thrown into chaos when a woman who was part of a team that had captured Jane three years ago has returned to hunt her again with help from her Russian boss. Jane needs to get her family to safety before she can go after the woman, her team and her boss while rescuing innocent people in harm's way. The non-stop action keeps one turning the pages to the end. Sad that this is the end of the series due to Mr. Perry's death.
#TheTreeofLightandFlowers #PenzlerPublishers #MysteriousPress #NetGalley
Profile Image for Mary MacKintosh.
969 reviews17 followers
March 11, 2026
Jane has left her role as someone who helps people avoid being killed by human monsters. She now has a baby, and a good life with her physician husband. But a girl shows up who needs her skills, and Jane accepts the challenge. What should have been a routine mission of turning Claire into Kate becomes very complicated, and Jane’s whole family, baby May and husband Corey, are drawn in.

It’s possible that this is the last Jane Whitefield novel. I would be sorry, but have seen this possibility coming as we all load our private lives into the Internet, and people become easier to find. Jane is capable, resourceful, and moral, but can kill swiftly and remorselessly if need be. We need strong women in our fiction, especially these days.
313 reviews1 follower
March 28, 2026
I was so very sorry to read about the death of Thomas Perry recently. I have read every one of his novels over the years and always checked if another was upcoming in the near future. One could tell that this man, besides having a brilliant imagination and the writing skill to match it, was a good man with a sense of humour and an understanding of all the vagaries of human nature. If you haven’t read his other books, do so - you won’t be disappointed.

I will sorely miss putting his name at the top of the list that I check for my favourite authors upcoming books.

When I finished this book, I noted the name of his wife, Jo Perry, and having read her chapter in “The Best Dog Ever” (a must read for dog lovers) I feel quite sure that I can embrace her as a new author to follow.
Profile Image for Loy.
1,544 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 26, 2025
The Tree of Light and Flowers by Thomas Perry is the latest installment in the Jane Whitefield series.
The story starts with Jane, who is pregnant, having a car crash and the baby early.
As the story unfolds, people are searching for her—to help them escape or to find her and the people she has helped.
The book is so well written and the story so suspenseful that it is hard to put down.
I have read or listened to all the Jane books, and this one is top tier.
You need to read some of the earlier books to help with the enjoyment of this one Highly recommended.
Profile Image for M.
1,596 reviews8 followers
March 27, 2026
Since this is the 11th Jane Whitefield novel…so readers this is NOT a stand alone book-please read others in the series to gain Jane’s ancestral Indian heritage and her previous life of helping vulnerable people!

Jane is now married, has a daughter, a teenager?, a Russian asset is after her and now her peaceful life has turned upside down. Her “old” life of helping people who are running away from troubles is back in this page turner. How can Jane assist everyone who needs her help and still remain “true” to herself and her husband…Enjoy
Profile Image for Nancy McFarlane.
892 reviews216 followers
March 5, 2026
I was so sad to hear that Thomas Perry died unexpectantly in September. I loved the Jane Whitefield series, the first of which I read over 30 years ago. This, the last Jane Whitefield was, as usual, filled with almost non-stop action and peril but it also was written as if Perry knew it would be the last of Jane’s stories. While I highly recommend you read the previous books it is not necessary in order to enjoy and understand who Jane is and what she does.
36 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2026
To say the least - at the end of the book - as a postscript from his wife - I learned that Thomas Perry will not be writing anymore novels - as he passed away in September 2025.

Thus ends my annual Jonzing for the next new Thomas Perry novel.

I read the Butcher's Boy while on vacation in 1982 - and was hooked.

I have read all his books - and have found all of them to be well crafted. This last one being no exception.

RIP Mr. Perry.



Profile Image for Dan Downing.
1,403 reviews18 followers
March 14, 2026
Mr. Perry astounds with his craftsmanship. He brings up something slipped over a few chapters back, suddenly making it central to a scheme, now made front and center; the reader gets an "Aha!" moment.
Jane Whitefield, our heroine, has been around for a couple of decades, engaging critics and readers with clever escapades since Mr. Perry knew everything about everything, it seemed. In the end, Jane had to pay some debts to good fortune; she had to embrace her husband and child and her new life. Mr. Perry made the problems develop naturally and then he dissolved them naturally. A satisfying end to a delightful series.
Recommended.
Profile Image for Donna M.
811 reviews7 followers
March 31, 2026
This is the last book that Thomas Perry wrote and it is the 10th book in the Jane Whitefield series. It is a fitting end to the series with Jane dealing with the crew who had captured her before and she still helped a couple of runners. Most everything was wrapped up and even if some the encounters were resolved somewhat unbelievably Jane still shines as one of the most interesting characters written—the kind of person you would want to be in your corner.
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