Reviews for Silent In The Grave

Silent In The Grave by Deanna Raybourn Summary and Reviews

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Book Reviews of Silent In The Grave

Book Review: A Good Read
Summary: 4 Stars

This was a good read. It had a lot more substance than your ordinary murder mystery. The author does a good job of developing the characters. The heroine is not as analytical as I would like her to be, but then not everyone is all that analytical!

Book Review: A Good Read
Summary: 4 Stars

Not a great read. The characters could be a little flat but the setting and mystery were terrific. Looking forward to the sequel.

Book Review: A Great Start
Summary: 5 Stars

This is one of the best starts to a series by a new author that I've ever read. This book has everything a historical mystery should - and more. Great characters, historical period pieces woven in perfectly, humor, mystery, romance and scariness all abound. I can't wait for the second installment to come out.

Book Review: A Worthy Debut for All
Summary: 4 Stars

Lady Julia Grey may have married into a family even more wealthy than her own, may have lived a sheltered life surrounded by servants, and may have been blind to the harsh world outside her front door but she carried the genes of her own eccentric family as well. The woman certainly had a sense of humor, and as first-person-narrator of Silent in the Grave she displays it immediately in the book's opening lines: "To say that I met Nicholas Brisbane over my husband's dead body is not entirely accurate. Edward, it should be noted, was still twitching on the floor."

Set in 1886 Victorian England, Deanna Raybourn's irreverent novel combines elements of mysteries, romance novels and historical fiction in such a way that the book will appeal to a wide audience. I am not at all a fan of romance fiction, for instance, but despite the novel's obvious appeal to fans of that genre, I never considered it to be a romance novel and enjoyed it for the historical detail and social observations in which Raybourn cloaked her story of Edward's mysterious death.

Lady Julia married a man she had known since they were just children playing together and she believed that she knew everything about him. She certainly understood the fragility caused by a heart condition from which so many males in her husband's bloodline suffered, including his cousin Simon who was dying in their home from that very illness. So when Edward suddenly dropped to the floor and died during a formal gathering at their home she was not much surprised.

What did surprise her was Brisbane's revelation that her husband had hired him to investigate the mysterious death threats that he had been receiving in the mail for some time. Lady Julia may not at first have believed that there was anything mysterious about her husband's sudden death, but she felt an obligation to her deceased husband to find out one way or the other. And if a crime had been committed she was determined that the criminal would pay a heavy price.

Nicholas Brisbane, expecting to use Lady Julia as just another source in his investigation, soon found himself forced to accept her as a full partner and, despite their series of adventures resulting from the investigation itself, it is their relationship that is really the heart of Silent in the Grave. And their mutual attraction means that they will be working together in the sequels that will follow this fist book in what promises to be a successful series.

Deanna Raybourn has written a first-rate Victorian mystery with an atmosphere and period details that have an authentic feel about them. Lady Grey's sense of humor and the antics of her eccentric family keep the reader from becoming bogged down in the rather dark details of the mystery itself, a story involving deceptions, hidden sexual appetites, and disease that she could never have imagined before the death of her husband. All in all, this is an excellent debut novel despite the fact that it seemed to take forever for Lady Julia to finally make up her mind to investigate her husband's death, a rather sluggish beginning that could potentially cause some readers to mistakenly give up on the book before it really hits its stride. At times I felt like shaking Lady Grey and telling her to get on with it. When she finally did, I found that it had been worth the wait.


Book Review: A complete waste of time.
Summary: 1 Stars

Silent in the Grave is not the worst book I have ever read, but it is a close runner up. The book reads painfully slow. About half-way through the book I seriously considered just chucking it aside. Some reviewers are outraged due to a certain "controversial" aspect of the book. The author was clearly trying to shock her readers. Well, she failed shocking this reader. One of my favorite books, Through a Glass Darkly, by Karleen Koen was based on something similar. The problem with this book is that it was horribly written. Silent in the Grave is a Victorian mystery, yet it hardly has the feel of the Victorian era. It looks like the author did some minor research and then just sprinkled a few of her findings here and there. She didn't really bother with character development and did a poor job with description. There is just nothing to compell the readers to keep reading. I have only ever given up on one book, but this book seriously tested me.
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