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A Christmas Grace: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Anne Perry Publisher: Ballantine Books Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy New: $7.00 You Save: $11.00 (61%)
New (47) Used (15) Collectible (2) from $5.81
Rating: 13 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.4 x 1
ISBN: 0345502035 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914 EAN: 9780345502032
Publication Date: October 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description When the season brings a chill, nothing warms the heart or elevates the spirits like a new novel by Anne Perry, whom the Chicago Sun-Times calls “the most adroit sleight-of-hand practitioner since Agatha Christe.” Perry’s gifts are on full display in A Christmas Grace–a hope-filled tale of forgiveness that is rich with mystery and intrigue.
With Christmas just around the corner, Thomas Pitt’s sister-in-law, Emily Radley, is suddenly called from London to be with her dying aunt. Leaving her husband and two children behind, Emily makes the long journey to an all-but-forgotten town in the county of Connemara, on the western coast of Ireland. She soon discovers that a tragic legacy haunts the once closeknit community.
Violent storms ravage the coast and keep alive painful memories of an unsolved murder and unsettling fears that a killer may still live among the residents of the lonely Irish town. Determined to lighten her aunt’s heart and help the troubled community, Emily sets out to unmask the culprit. When a lone shipwreck survivor washes up onshore, he brings with him not only the key to solving the terrible crime but the opportunity for the townspeople to make peace with the past–and with one another.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Lacked the magic of past Christmas books January 8, 2009 L. J. Roberts (Oakland, CA) First Sentence: Emily Radley stood in the center of her magnificent drawing room and considered where she should have the Christmas tree placed so that it would show to the best advantage. Charlotte Pitt has bronchitis, her mother is traveling so Thomas Pitt requests that Charlotte's sister, Emily, answer the request to travel to a small town in Western Ireland where her aunt, who had broken from the family by marrying a Catholic, is dying. Rather reluctantly, Emily complies. During a severe storm, Emily sees a ship in distress upon the coast. The one survivor reminds the town of a similar incident several ago, resulting in an unsolved murder. Trust of each other has never returned to the town and can't until Emily uncovers the killer. Ms. Perry's skill at description and creating a strong sense of place was very much in evidence as well as was the emotional questioning and growth of Emily. The characters were interesting--Perry is wonderful in the creation of her characters--but they seemed a bit flat. The mystery wasn't compelling. The story didn't have the emotional uplift others have had and felt somewhat unresolved. As much as I love Ms. Perry's Christmas books, I felt this was the weakest thus far.
Written for the Money... January 4, 2009 M. Gamble I enjoy Anne Perry's Pitt and especially Monk series of books; however, Christmas Grace is not in the same league. While the descriptions of Ireland are well written, the feeble dialogue and weak plot are embarrassments and at a few points, made me laugh out loud. (How many ways can Perry tell us that "Emily could think of nothing to say"? Well...quite a few, actually.) The book seemed as though it were dashed off for a deadline, and I had the distinct feeling it was written in exchange for a quick check.
Perry's Christmas Mysteries Losing Steam December 26, 2008 the real lily bart (Colorado Springs, CO USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm a Perry fan, but this latest offering in the Christmas mystery series seems as if its only raison detre is to fulfill a publisher's contract. While there are some flashes of nice writing~ especially about the landscape~ the plotting is weak, the coincidences strain credulity, the foreshadowing is heavy-handed, the conclusion rushed and full of holes. Though a slim volume, it was a slow read~ not well-paced at all. Not worthy of a great mystery writer~ but I guess a contract to churn out an annual book is a contract.
A Christmas tale of second chances December 15, 2008 Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The year is 1895 and the setting is London, England. In A CHRISTMAS GRACE, Anne Perry introduces us to the sister-in-law of one of her recurring characters, Thomas Pitt. Emily Radley receives a letter from Pitt just a few weeks prior to Christmas. He asks that Emily leave her cozy London home and make her way to a small village in the Connemara region of Western Ireland to visit her dying aunt, Susannah Ross, who has been estranged from their family for several years. Knowing that this probably will be Aunt Susannah's last Christmas --- and due to the fact that illness keeps the Pitts from making the journey themselves --- Emily is the only remaining relative able to represent the family at her aunt's side for the Christmas holiday. Emily reluctantly agrees to this sudden request and inconvenience. She reaches out to Father Tyndale, the local parish priest who contacted the Pitts, and makes arrangements to meet with him at Galway station for the journey to the small village of Oughterard in Western Ireland. Apparently, Susannah's marriage to an Irishman who was considered well beneath her means was the essential reason for the estrangement between herself and the rest of her family. Emily is eager to meet Susannah and make her last Christmas as festive as possible. Upon arrival in Connemara County, Emily is met with a town of close-knit residents who seem reluctant to open up to an outsider and may be hiding something. Susannah's home is beautiful and festively decorated, to a point, and located just off of the seaside docks. Violent storms are in the forecast as Emily settles down to her temporary home and meets with Susannah and her loyal housekeeper, Maggie. Emily is immediately taken with Susannah and feels she has done the right thing by embarking on this trip. As the storm batters the seaside village as predicted, Emily spies from her window a ship in serious distress that appears to be sinking just off the coast of Oughterard.Local residents brave the storm to rescue the lone survivor of the shipwreck who has washed up on shore. Suffering from a bout of amnesia, he remembers only that his name is Daniel. Emily takes him into Susannah's home as her and other locals attempt to nurse him back to health. Little does Emily realize that Daniel may hold the key to solving a terrible crime that may have taken place in the town several years prior. With Daniel gaining his strength back and beginning to travel with Emily around the village, she notices that the local population is acting very strangely in his presence. At this time, she also comes to the realization that the town is quite under-populated with several homes left abandoned for no good reason. The local historian even hedges from her direct questioning about this fact. After further prying, Emily learns that several years earlier another ship had wrecked upon the shores of the village --- also providing one lone survivor to be rescued by the townspeople. As more of the recent history of this event is revealed, Emily finds out that the lone survivor of the earlier shipwreck --- known as Connor Riordan --- was the cause for the mysterious behavior of the community, as well as the alleged reason for the curse that has brought death and misfortune to the village. Connor allegedly charmed his way into the hearts of everyone in the community only to begin peppering the residents with questions about themselves in a way too familiar and uncomfortable for the town to handle. The legend is that Connor died during a drowning accident --- but the community all knows he was the victim of a homicide --- and this murder is the reason for the curse upon them. Hence, Emily now fears for the life of Daniel, who has begun to ask questions and befriend certain members of the village much in the way Connor had years earlier. A trip to Galway --- the intended destination of the unfortunate ship Daniel was traveling on --- reveals the truth to Emily, and she returns to the village to confront the person she now knows killed Connor. The Galway visit also fills in the missing history of Susannah's late husband, who had made a similar trip following Connor's shipwreck. Did Susannah's husband find out something about Connor that caused his untimely death? If so, it's a secret he took to his grave that has now been revealed to Emily. With A CHRISTMAS GRACE, Anne Perry has given us a tale of second chances, as stated in the novel's dedication. While the story does not have much at all to do with Christmas initially, the opportunity for redemption as well as the burying of the past as a final gift to a dying relative represents all that this season stands for. Perry once again has given us a great mystery with a denouement that will satisfy all those who require an elevation of their spirits during the holidays. --- Reviewed by Ray Palen
More Christmas Goodness from Anne Perry December 9, 2008 Sacramento Book Review (Sacramento, CA) People that follow Anne Perry's work, like her detective novels, will be excited to read her newest one, A Christmas Grace. Based on one of the main characters in her bigger detective novel series, Pitt, this story follows Emily Radley as she is summoned back to Ireland to be with her dying aunt in Connemara. But all is not well in this small town, as the ever looming threat that one of its inhabitants could be a murder weighs on the town like a load of bricks. With the help of a shipwreck survivor who washes to shore, Emily sets out to find out who this town's murderer is to bring peace to the town and to her poor aunt. Anne Perry does an excellent job at showing the reader the isolationism and the deep religious roots that make this community the way it is without sounding like she herself is trying to spread the word. This is a very good book for the holiday that anyone could pick up and enjoy.
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