The lacemaker's secret

Kathleen Ernst, 1959-

Large print - 2019

Greed, uncertainty, and death get tangled in the mystery of a rare piece of Belgian lace. Curator Chloe Ellefson needs distraction from the unsettling family secret she's just learned. It doesn't help that her boyfriend, Roelke McKenna, has been troubled for weeks and won't say why. Chloe hopes a consulting job at Green Bay's Heritage Hill Historical Park, where an old Belgian-American farmhouse is being restored, will be a relaxing escape. Instead she discovers a body in a century-old bake oven. Chloe's research suggests that a rare and valuable piece of lace made its way to nearby Door County, Wisconsin, with the earliest Belgian settlers. More importantly, someone is desperate to find it. Inspired by a courageous... Belgian woman who survived cholera, famine, and the Great Fire, Chloe must untangle clues to reveal secrets old and new . . . before the killer strikes again.

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Kathleen Ernst, 1959- (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
547 pages (large print) : illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781432862053
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Lace is the fabric that holds together past and present.Both police officer Roelke McKenna and his girlfriend, Chloe Ellefson, curator of collections at Old World Wisconsin, have something on their minds. Roelke can't get over the guilt he feels for planting evidence on his cousin's dangerous ex-husband; Chloe has just heard that her mother, who's fiercely proud of her Norwegian heritage, may have been adopted and is perhaps not Norwegian at all. So it's a welcome distraction when Chloe is booked to work on a project in Door County, Wisconsin, where her old friend Elise O'Rourke, an expert on Belgian lace, has arranged for their visits to coincide. Just before she arrives at the Belgian Acres BB, Chloe spots a bake oven at a derelict farm. When she takes a closer look, she finds a body stuffed in the oven. Her hostess, Sharon Bertranda descendant of the Lejeunes, one of the first Belgian families to settle the areais a relative of the dead man, who owned the farm. Alternating chapters unfold the fascinating history of the family of talented lacemaker Seraphine Moreau Lejeune, from her decision to marry her sweetheart and set off to wilderness Wisconsin, where the family's struggles to survive force her to give up her dream of lacemaking, to the end of World War I, when another dream comes true. Chloe quickly becomes immersed in her work at the Heritage Hill living history site, which is adding a Belgian farm. But she's surprised and dismayed by Elise's lack of interest in spending time with her. Elise, who's determined to find samples of old lace, has learned that a particular rare and valuable piece may still be in the area. Elise goes missing, Chloe is kidnapped, and another man is murdered before Chloe can figure out the motive for the unknown killer.In this heartfelt tale of labor and love, Ernst (Mining for Justice, 2017, etc.) produces one of her most winning combinations of historical evocation and clever mystery. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.