I absolutely love it when there’s a book and author out there, under my radar, totally unknown to me, that purely by chance comes to my attention. While reading the multi-volume Abraham Lincoln biography written by Hay and Nicolay (1890), I discovered that the celebrated author and poet Bayard Taylor once visited Lincoln in the White House. I had never before heard of him, so once I found out that he wrote a novel centered in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, virtually in my backyard, I had to read it. I’m so glad I did. I have roots in the environs of that town, which made the effort all the more pertinent. I love this book. It is filled, like most novels, with its ample share of heroes and villains, but the suspense that permeates throughout the novel, a guarded family secret, made the plot and characters so much more interesting. Add to that the inclusion of a real-life villain, the notorious highwayman Sandy Flash, and you have the making of a 5-star novel that I found very hard to put down. Likewise, as one book led to another, in my discovery of this novel through a biography, this book leads to another biography, this one on Sandy Flash, which is my next read. Who knew that in all my years of reading, there was a domino effect waiting in the wings.