Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
Everyone in Sawrey likes Ben Hornby. So when Beatrix finds the shepherd dead in the meadow and suspects foul play, she wonders who would have done such a thing. A trio of village cats has an idea: When Ben breathed his last, his sheep must have seen his killer before scattering. So they set out to find the far-flung flock. Although she’s distracted by duties at the farm and the sad plight of a young girl, Beatrix must get to the bottom of this. As the stories intertwine, Beatrix and the creatures realize that, to solve this case, all of Sawrey, both the two- and four-legged inhabitants, must work together...

303 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 5, 2005

91 people are currently reading
1470 people want to read

About the author

Susan Wittig Albert

120 books2,375 followers
Susan is the author/co-author of biographical/historical fiction, mysteries, and nonfiction. Now in her 80s and continuing to write, she says that retirement is not (yet) an option. She publishes under her own imprint. Here are her latest books.

A PLAIN VANILLA MURDER, #27 in the long-running China Bayles/Pecan Springs series.

Two Pecan Springs novella trilogies: The Crystal Cave Trilogy (featuring Ruby Wilcox): noBODY, SomeBODY Else, and Out of BODY; and The Enterprise Trilogy (featuring Jessica Nelson): DEADLINES, FAULTLINES, and FIRELINES.

THE DARLING DAHLIAS AND THE POINSETTIA PUZZLE #8 in the Darling Dahlias series, set in the early 1930s in fictional Darling AL

THE GENERAL'S WOMEN. Kay, Mamie, and Ike--the wartime romance that won a war but could have derailed a presidency.

LOVING ELEANOR: A novel about the intimate 30-year friendship of Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena Hickok, based on their letters

A WILDER ROSE: the true story of Rose Wilder Lane, who transformed her mother from a farm wife and occasional writer to a literary icon

THE TALE OF CASTLE COTTAGE, #8 in the Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter

DEATH ON THE LIZARD, the 12th and last (2006) of the Robin Paige series, by Susan and Bill Albert

TOGETHER, ALONE: A MEMOIR OF MARRIAGE AND PLACE

AN EXTRAORDINARY YEAR OF ORDINARY DAYS

WORK OF HER OWN: A WOMAN'S GUIDE TO RIGHT LIVELIHOOD

WRITING FROM LIFE: TELLING YOUR SOUL'S STORY

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
724 (32%)
4 stars
965 (43%)
3 stars
481 (21%)
2 stars
60 (2%)
1 star
12 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 235 reviews
Profile Image for Debbie.
920 reviews77 followers
August 31, 2016
I am really enjoying this series. They are definitely fairytale for adults. Just a good escape from life's woes.
Profile Image for Laura.
884 reviews335 followers
August 7, 2023
4.5 stars. I’ve been on a great reading run lately. This series has become a favorite. If you’re looking for a cozy mystery with interesting characters and some magical realism, this one is a fine example. I’m also enjoying the audiobook versions, which are all well-narrated by the same person.

The death is off to the side, there is no explicit violence or sex, and I really love the recurring characters. The main character is Beatrix Potter, and the series is loosely based on her life. She helps solve the mystery, and the village animal characters also help. The animals understand the humans and each other, and have their own lives and challenges, some of which we see. The humans don’t understand the animals, but Beatrix, the artist and naturalist, is closer to them than most, and understands them best.

It may sound a bit woo woo but it really works. I’m finding this series just perfect for 3am waking, I can skip back a few tracks and it’s a gentle way to fall back asleep. Nothing is too dramatic to keep me awake, but the village and the recurring characters are that kind of gentle feeling like the nighttime stories on headspace lol. There are now two recurring young adult characters, who are my favorite of the bunch.

My library system doesn’t own the third book in this series on CD (which I need in order to transfer books to my MP3 player now that overdrive has been discontinued), but thanks to my daughter, who alerted me to the existence of WorldCat, I was able to find the cd book in nearby state systems. My local library was able to borrow it for me for free - I didn’t even have to pay postage (although before placing the request, they said I might), so that was a nice bonus! This series is also available on Hoopla and Libby.

A highly recommended series and volume, and I will have to try this author’s other series as well.
Profile Image for C.  (Comment, never msg)..
1,563 reviews206 followers
September 29, 2022
* I take my writing seriously and consider comments the reward. Please do not leave “like button” clicks, until you are accompanying them with remarks for me. *

Learning about Beatrice Potter in "The Tale Of Hill Top Cottage" and having enjoyed her personality in the early 1900s re-enactment of her life, I was happy to tune in more. I never care for the early parts of any story where people are dubious about the protagonist achieving something. Novel #2 has gotten past the question of a single, London city woman running a farm. We watch her grow involved with Sawrey villagers and enjoy all she is building.

Calm feminism is strong, for another newcomer is Sarah Barwick. She inherited the kitty Tabitha's former house, from which she establishes a bakery. She is assertive, plain-spoken, rides a bicycle, and is the earliest female wearer of slacks. An important addition in this series is Caroline, foreign Granddaughter of the village's dour grand dame, whose parents passed away in New Zealand. The cottage tales incorporate the theme of altering societal expectations as past-century women show all they can be.

The mystery this novel contains is very good, harsher than the first. There’s a suspicious death rather than missing property and even an issue of animal rights, in the face of ‘badger-baiting’; which is of course illegal. Each title features a different home or region in the village and as you progress, you are quite familiar with Near & Far Sawrey, its families, and pets.
Profile Image for Jen.
212 reviews6 followers
April 9, 2025
If you enjoy a charming mystery, solved mostly by animals that plot and plan amongst themselves while following the humans around to their teas and farming adventurers, then this is the series for you. I’ve tried some of this authors other mystery’s but they don’t appeal to me the way this series does.
Profile Image for Amanda.
840 reviews327 followers
September 8, 2019
Not as enjoyable as the first, even though there were badgers in this one. The mystery took too long to become apparent and wrapped up too quickly. The characters were a bit sickly sweet in this one, too, but I expect I’ll continue with the series at some point.
Profile Image for Eden.
2,218 reviews
September 25, 2020
2020 bk 317. The second story - and it was delightful. I originally posted the review for Book #3. to book #2. If you are a lover of Potter, Edwardian times, and Britain - this is an excellent book.
Profile Image for Grey853.
1,553 reviews61 followers
March 14, 2008
I wish I could give this book six stars instead of five. I actually like this one better than THE TALE OF HILLTOP FARM, which is saying something. The fun of this series is the delightful cast of characters and richness of the narrative.

The odd thing is I don't usually go for quaint, but this series wins me over very quickly, making me see and smell the world of Beatrix's Potter's farm and small town in England. What I really like about this book in particular is the character of Caroline. She's a strong-willed child who's in a terrible situation, orphaned and forced to live with her grandmother who obviously isn't thrilled with having a girl about the place.

This book also has a much stronger storyline when it comes to the mysteries, with lots of tension and potential danger for Caroline.

Another thing that I enjoy is that it breaks me out of my comfort zone on three different things I don't normally like in a book. One, it's a historical, something I don't normally read, but I loved Beatrix Potter as a child, so I wanted to see how Albert would recreate her world. Two, it's got multiple points of view, something that can be very confusing. However, it's done very well here and I can't imagine being able to tell this story any other way. Limiting the view to Beatrix just wouldn't have the same effect of showing all the relationships and interconnection in the town. Third, and most importantly, as an adult I rarely read stories where the animals are given voices, but in this series it works very well. If the humans could just hear the animals, life would be so much easier for everyone but the reader.

Bottomline, I love this series and plan to check out the rest.
Profile Image for Donna.
603 reviews
April 8, 2022
This quick, comfort read was the April selection for one of my book discussion groups. It's the second in a series set in England's Lake District and featuring Beatrix Potter. It was pretty light on mystery but well written and appealing I'm sure for fans of the cozy mystery genre. I didn't mind taking the time to read it because factual information about Potter's life on her farm was interspersed, but I did have trouble getting past the talking animals.
Profile Image for Trish.
2,819 reviews41 followers
September 26, 2018
The second of these I've read, and I enjoyed it as much as the first. I especially like the Beatrix Potter/Narnia style treatment of animals.

It does suffer from American words, rather than English ones, even though its set in England, and 1906 England at that, like fall instead of autumn, contractor instead of builder and "muffin", which I don't think was referring to what we call a muffin.
Profile Image for Sarah Nealy.
314 reviews
June 3, 2024
I really enjoyed this one, better than the first one. Very cozy and charming. The talking animals are very entertaining!
Profile Image for Tuesdayschild.
934 reviews10 followers
February 26, 2021
Repeat late-night listen.
I still prefer the first book more than this one, the addition of Miss Martine as one of my least appreciated characters in this series helps this lose a star:
I enjoyed having one of the secondary characters as a migrant from a sheep station in New Zealand: her grandmother is a product of her age and social class – the culture shock is felt by both of them.
Sadly, the old lady’s snobbery and dislike of lowly commoners put that child’s life at risk.

Just have to add: I love the names of the animals in these books.

Extra: Badger Baiting.
Brit Trip locations: Near Sawrey and Far Sawrey, Cumbria, England
Profile Image for Dani.
214 reviews11 followers
April 13, 2025
3.5 stars

These are almost the definition of cozy mysteries and actually well-written to boot. Not a series I’d want to devour, but one that I’ll be happy to return to when I need something calm and enjoyable.
647 reviews4 followers
March 2, 2022
a change of pace, written as if from a calmer, less crowded world -- the world of "Between the Lakes" in 1906. The second in a series of many, it turns out. In this book, as in the first in the series, I found myself initially impatient with the pace . . . until realizing that it's truly a pace I prefer, where animals communicate across species boundaries, and only the humans are unable to understand. After decades of living with one female cat at a time, I begin to think I understand at least a little of what she has to tell me, and the author develops this interesting schism deliciously. How much happier we, and this planet, would be, if we hadn't lost our comprehension of other creatures! The book is a welcome change of pace, even if wholly fictional in this fast moving world we inhabit. I look forward to the third book in the series, intending to read it aloud at tea time.
Profile Image for Caite &#x1f337;.
46 reviews3 followers
October 25, 2023
A darling, sweet, cozy read. If you love Beatrix Potter, cottagecore aesthetic, country living, animals, and tea, this is an lovely little read.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
1,007 reviews22 followers
December 14, 2025
Second in the series and I feel I am getting hooked. This one had more of a storyline to it with a little bit more intensity. I like that a lot of this is actually based on Potter‘s life, while mixing in so much fantasy. A Jolly good time.
Profile Image for Anne Hawn.
909 reviews71 followers
June 21, 2017
In this second tale of life in the village, Bearix Potter is beginning to fit in better because of her kind manner and quiet ways. The villagers don’t know what to make of her determination to run her farm by herself though, but they like the fact that she is attempting to build up a herd of local sheep which are in danger of dying out. When she goes to look over some sheep she has bought, she finds the body of the elderly shepherd and it appears that he has been murdered.

At the same time, she is struggling to build an addition to her farm so that she can keep on the family who have worked the farm for so long and yet give her the privacy of her own home. Working with the local builder is a daunting task, but Beatrix is proving to be tougher than she looks.

In the village a crisis has arisen when the job of head teacher is vacant and the hiring of a new head is suddenly called into question. Everyone favors the primary teacher, but the lady of the manor has suddenly brought in a new candidate with much better credentials. Something seems wrong about him though and it is not just his credentials. The Lady’s personal assistant seems to be wielding more and more power and things just smell funny to Beatrix.

This is a delightful book to just sit back and read or, even better, listen to as an audiobook. The people are engaging and the animals keep up enough chatter to push the plot ahead and sometimes get through to their owners.
Profile Image for Pamela Shropshire.
1,455 reviews72 followers
December 29, 2016
Book 2 of the Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter series. It picks up about a year after Hill Top Farm leaves off and revisits the villages of Near and Far Sawrey and the inhabitants we previously met, along with a few new ones.

We get to know Lady Longford better, as well as her granddaughter, Caroline, and her companion, Miss Martine. Will Heelis, a solicitor from Hawkshead, is a rather important character (and will be even more so later, as anyone who knows about Miss Potter's life can tell you).

I was completely charmed by Bosworth Badger and The Brockery Inn and its myriad of animal lodgers.

Miss Potter finds Ben Hornby dead; she had purchased some sheep from him and had gone to fetch them. She finds two clues that lead to the arrest of his assailant. The other mystery involves badger-baiting which is both cruel and illegal. The scene where the animals (and Captain Woodcock, Justice of the Peace, and the local Constable, and Will Heelis) storm the baiting scene behind the hotel in Far Sawrey was particularly memorable!

All ends happily for humans and animals!
Profile Image for Barbara.
231 reviews1 follower
September 28, 2018
I stumbled across this series by chance at my local library. I have currently read the first two books of the series. I am so glad I found this series. It is a work of fiction loosely based on the time of Beatrix Potter's life after she purchased Hilltop Farm in Near Sawry located in the lake district of England. The town is populated with both real and fictional characters. The book also has a healthy dose of fantasy in the form of talking animals. Since Miss Potter in addition to being an author of children's books based on animals, was also a naturalist and intrigued by all of God's creatures. As a lover of Wind in the Willows, these books are right up my alley. You come to know and love the various villagers of Near Sawry and life in a small rural English town during the early 20th century. The first 2 books involved mysteries but I'm not sure if this will be the case in the following books.
Profile Image for Vickie.
2,297 reviews6 followers
May 5, 2010
Oh boy, how I love this series. It is such a gentle, charming, wonderfully written mystery series. Just a wee bit of fantasy since the animals talk amongst themselves and the reader is in on the conversations and their own investigation.
There are two mysteries going on in the book, each is resolved nicely. I kind of had an idea on whodunnit on one mystery, but I kept reading as the story is just so wonderfully told. And there was the other mystery going on and I didn't figure it out.
I am looking forward to the next in the series, THE TALE OF HAWTHORNE HOUSE, when it comes up either on Mt Git'r'Read or RecordedBooks. Ideally, I'll listen to as many as I can, especially if Virginia Leishman continues to narrate. She has a lovely voice and is perfect for the voice of Beatrix and all of the characters.
Five English countryside beans.....

Profile Image for Colleen.
321 reviews4 followers
June 6, 2025
**Synopsis:** Beatrix is back at Hilltop, despite drama with her parents as usual. She and Mr. Jennings are planning to pick up their new Herdwick ewes and lambs. Herdwicks are a unique breed, as they are hefted to the land and know their place. Their wool is best for carpets, which wasn’t as desirable in Beatrix’s time, but she didn’t want such a good species to go extinct. Unfortunately, when they go to retrieve the sheep, they find their former owner, Ben Hornby dead at the bottom of a cliff. Beatrix stays with him while Mr. Jennings goes to get Captain Woodcock, Constable Braithewaite, and others. They are unable to find her sheep at the time.

We also meet Bosworth Badger, who runs The Brockery. Badgers (at least English badgers) have large setts that are dug out over generations and therefore often become temporary lodgings for other animals, such as rabbits and foxes. Bosworth is a particularly hospitable badger and has the help of Parsley, his full time cook, and Flotsam and Jetsam, two orphaned rabbits who work as sort of hostesses at the Brockery. However, he had recently learned that a young badger family had been dug and kidnapped from a sett nearby. It turns out this was Parsley’s aunt Primrose and her two cubs, Thorn and Hyacinth. Jeremy managed to rescue Thorn and took him Dr. Sutton, the local vet, to have his paw looked after. However, Primrose and Hyacinth are still lost.

Bosworth had also seen Caroline Longford. Caroline is the granddaughter of Lady Longford who lives at Tidmarsh Manor. Lady Longford had disowned her son for not marrying the woman she had picked out for him. He had moved to New Zealand, married there, had a sheep farm, and had his daughter, Caroline. Unfortunately, both he and Caroline’s mother died and she was sent to England to her grandmother. Lady Longford initially refused to take her but Will Heelis (her solicitor) and Vicar Sackett appealed to her Christian duty. The house is not a happy place for Caroline. Her grandmother is quite cold and her grandmother’s companion, Miss Martine, who is also serving as her temporary governess is quite terrible. Caroline ended up burning her dear journal that her father gave her to keep it out of Miss Martine’s clutches. She started a new journal, this time in code, and hid it in the badger sett (known to us as the Brockery).

Meanwhile Miss Martine (and her phoney fake French accent) has convinced Lady Longford that Dr. Harrison Gainwell is the best choice for Head Teacher at Sawrey school. Lady Longford has “informed” the Captain that Dr. Gainwell will have the position. The school board committee is quite distraught, as they intend the position to go to Margaret Nash, who had been the previous teacher of the younger children and had taken over since Miss Crabbe was injured. Miss Crabbe was late in providing her letter of reference, or she’d already have the job. This of course ignites all sorts of gossip and Margaret becomes convinced she won’t get the job and this is doubly concerning as her sister Annie is often ill. This all comes to nothing and Margaret is given the job.

Bosworth organizes the other animals in a raid against Jack Ogden, who had kidnapped the badgers for Badger Baiting. (This is where badgers are pitted against a mean dog.). Tuppenny, Miss Potter’s guinea pig, who was loaned to Caroline, ends up escaping briefly and goes on the raid with the other animals. At the same time, Captain Woodcock (who detests Badger Baiting) finds out Ogden has been holding it on nights he knows the Captain will be out of town and he shows up with Will and the constable to shut things down. Will saves Tuppenny and returns him to Miss Potter. Tuppenny gets to tell his tale of saving damsels to many people. Primrose, Hyacinth, and Thorn go to live at the Brockery, which makes Bosworth doubly happy as there is now a young male badger that he can pass on the Badger Badge of Authority to. Ogden is arrested for the death of Ben Hornby, though he swears it was an accident.

Beatrix Potter works out that Miss Martine and her brother, the supposed Dr. Gainwell, were actually conning Lady Longford after Caroline runs away and Jeremy finds her and take her to Miss Potter for temporary safekeeping. She figures out that Miss Martine has slowly been poisoning Lady Longford with the arsenic in fly papers that she’s dissolving into her tea. Lady Longford does not take the news well, but is in Beatrix’s debt a bit afterwards. Beatrix also finds her sheep at Issac Chance’s place and his big yellow farm dog, Mustard, goes to live at Hilltop as Chance is very mean to him.

There is a funny scene where poor Sarah manages to get treacle all over her kitchen and Dimity helps her clean it up. Beatrix also advises Sarah to put out a sign so she can sell sausage rolls to fell walkers and bicyclists who travel through the Lake District.

**Thoughts:** This is the only actual murder in all 8 of the books. Along with that and Miss Martine’s dastardly plans, this is probably the darkest book of the series, but I personally feel Bosworth and the Brockery’s coziness makes up for it. Bosworth may be my favorite character, though it’s hard to pick. I always like the bits based at the Brockery. Caroline and Lady Longford also end up being interesting additions, especially as Lady Longford repeatedly creates various problems throughout later books. I enjoyed seeing both the village expand (as we got to know many characters much better, along with a few new ones) and the animal universe expand as well. The Owl is a bit pompous but that makes him fun in this universe. I also enjoy how quickly Rascal has decided he is Miss Potter’s escort.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Becky Hoferer.
15 reviews
March 2, 2009
I really do like this historical thread of Wittig Albert's Beatrix Potter. It was very engaging to read and you don't have to start with the first book (I know I didn't). If you start somewhere other than book 1, you can easily catch on to what is happening since it is explained on how it happen in the first place (book 1). The sluething that is done by Miss Potter is independent from each book in the series. What I really liked was, at the end of the book, there are recipes from that time period to set out and try.
Profile Image for Kristen.
2,094 reviews161 followers
August 24, 2012
This is another delightful installment in the Beatrix Potter mystery series. Reminiscent of Dr. Doolittle with the talking animals, it adds a tiny bit of fantasy to it. This is the second mystery she solved. For those who like less gore in their mysteries, this is a light one for you. There's a lot of drama in Beatrix's world, even for the ladyship too in her own home, when there's talk of a new head teacher. Three events happen in Holly How around the same time. An easy and delightful read.
Profile Image for CindySR.
602 reviews8 followers
September 22, 2013
The conversations between Badgers and Dogs and Guinea Pigs got a little tedious but otherwise I liked this little murder mystery starring Beatrix Potter in her English country farm. Now I want to read a biography about Beatrix. Fortunately there is a short bibliography at the end of this book that told me which one I should read.

This is also #2 in a series so I shall look for #1 as well!
Profile Image for A.J..
Author 2 books4 followers
July 16, 2020
Chapters: 36
Pages: 287

First let me begin this review by saying that I read this book back in 2014. However, after I read a book, I always try to write out my feelings on the story when I finish. Sometimes, I’m moved to write a great deal to type up later. Other times, I just feel up to writing a very basic review. I never intended for it to take me six YEARS to get it on my GoodReads account, but it has. Obviously, by now, I don’t really remember much about the story, though sometimes my notes help jog my memory. So, if the following review doesn’t really say much or deal too much with the story or plot, that’s probably because I wasn’t moved by one or the other or both to write more than I did. However, such as it is I give to you.

My Review: Another good mystery—simple but entertaining, especially with the unique use of the animal kingdom. This book/series, thus far, reads as if it’s a cartoon for adults: One can imagine the story as if Miss Potter drew the series herself and allowed it to be set to animation. There are the adults going about their lives in the Big Folks’ world while the animals interact in their own world (in which they talk as humans), and when the two worlds intermix, the adults hear the animals talking but as we hear animals talk in real life: barks, meows, caws, moos, etc.

Mrs. Albert gives a personality to each animal and carries it off well for each: aloof and independent for cats (a bit snobbish, too), friendly and competitive for dogs, erudite for Professor Owl, brave for Bosworth Badger, and on and on. Having had dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, birds, a rat (my cousin’s)—all my life lived around animals, domestic and wildlife (birds, squirrels, racoons, skunks, and possums)—I find this a fun read but not “bubblegum” cutesy.

The one part I glossed over was the badger-baiting scene in which an abused-to-be-made-mean dog is put into a ring with a female badger (and, in this case, her female baby), and money is placed down to see which will come out on top: the dog or the badger(s). I doubt Mrs. Albert went into much detail, but I also didn’t want to take the chance. My grandmother read a modern book in which a dog fight was actually described, and it depressed her for DAYS after (it was SO hard for her to get the monstrous images out of her mind—especially since it involved pit bulls, and we happened to have pits at the time and LOVED them BIG TIME (just about the sweetest, loyalist, and most-protective-of-their-people dogs in the world)), so I didn’t want to be put in the same position, which is why I skipped over the scene.

Summary: Beatrix Potter is back in Sawrey, dealing with the renovation of her house and trying to build up her farm by acquiring some sheep, cows, pigs, etc. life’s going well for her despite a surly contractor who doesn’t like to work for women. But life comes to an end for Ben Hornby, a nearby farmer found dead (by Beatrix and Rascal) at the bottom of a hill on his property. He was the farmer from whom Beatrix had bought her sheep, but her sheep wondered off…or were they stolen? And the latest newcomer to Sawrey isn’t enjoying her time either. Caroline Longford is granddaughter to Lady Longford, the town’s patroness, who has a bossy companion who doesn’t like Caroline (for some reason) and doesn’t have much tolerance for the girl either, but her crochet may be explained by the sudden sickness she’s fallen prey to that her doctor, Mr. butters, can’t seem to diagnose.

To top off Caroline’s bad time and Hornby’s death (later to be determined murder), there’s a string of accidents and oddities: Hornby’s cows die, his barn burned down (both prior to death), Beatrix’s sheep missing, Beatrix’s guinea pig, Tuppenny, gets lost, and a badger sett’s raided, and a mother and two babies stolen. To top it ALL off, Sawrey’s beloved Miss Nash may lose the coveted Head Teacher position due to a mysterious man named Dr. Gainwell whom no one’s met before but to whom Lady Longford gives her backing.

All of these thrown into a pot and only Beatrix (with the help of her animal friends) can make any sense and order come out of it.

Grade: A
Profile Image for Rebecca.
2,775 reviews35 followers
July 10, 2017
As Beatrix Potter continues to work on getting Hilltop Farm--her recent purchase in the Lake District--ready to run as a farm again, life goes on in the nearby town of Sawrey for both the locals and the local animals. There's drama aplenty brewing, with old Ben Hornby found dead at the foot of Holly How, and then sheep Beatrix purchased from him gone missing. Then old Lady Longford's orphaned granddaughter Caroline, whom she had accepted with extreme reluctance, is having a miserable time at the manor thanks to her grandmother's sneaky companion Martine--she must be up to something. The local magistrate has his hands full dealing with Ben's death as well as rumors of an illegal badger baiting going on--not to mention what happens when Caroline goes missing. Meanwhile, the animals are having their own dramas, as they can talk as well as humans, but humans just don't understand them. There are the badgers at the Brockery, all of Beatrix's animals, and many more. They're not happy about the badger baiting either, but what can they do?

Honestly, if I'd known there were talking animals in this, I wouldn't have picked it up. Too twee for me, and the world here doesn't make sense. Would humans really not notice that animals wear clothes, use crockery, read books, get doctoral degrees, etc.? I just didn't buy it. And I love fantasy. I liked the description of the area, since it's a beautiful part of England, and I was happy enough to follow the stories of the humans even when the "mysteries" were pretty obvious. So...probably won't read more of the series.
1,357 reviews11 followers
January 17, 2020
I had just finished reading a very difficult book, filled with angst and sadness and bedlam. And it had no ending at all. It just stopped in the midst of pandemonium. I needed something light, fluffy, warm and cozy. I looked through books I have gathered over the years and haven't gotten around to reading. A bargain table book I picked up many years ago caught my eye - The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter. What could be better? I saw that this was book 2, but took a chance and found a most delightful little story. I would say this is a book for Young Adults, but us Old Adults can read it and delight in the adventures of the dog, the sheep, the guinea pig, and ?badgers?, to name just a few. I always thought of badgers as mean, nasty, disagreeable creatures, but these badgers were quite nice. And, of course, the animals all talk (in italics) which just adds to the fun. This is a nice, cozy little mystery and everything ends happily for the good guys and the baddies get their just desserts. I now want to read more in this series and also wade into the China Bayles novels. I really enjoy Ms. Albert's style of writing.
Profile Image for Ella J..
646 reviews18 followers
April 17, 2023
My rating:3 .5 out of 5 stars

When I read "The Tale of Hill Top Farm," last year I wasn't very impressed, which made me think that I may not continue "The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter," series.
I recently decided to give this series another chance and I am glad that I did.
After reading "The Tale of Holly How," I realized that this series is one that I will enjoy when I'm in the mood for a cozy novel with an idealistic setting and cast of characters. The books will never be deep and the mysteries never complex, but that's okay!
Sometimes we want to escape the stresses of real life when we read and I think the series does that.

I will say, though, that I do think that "The Tale of Holly How," is a bit more complex than the previous book in the series and for that reason I did quite enjoy it.

Not sure when I will read book 3 in "The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter," but it will be when I'm dreaming of a quiet life in the English countryside :)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 235 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.