Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this captivating outing from Henry (The Secret Book of Flora Lea), a children's book illustrator searches for her mother, a renowned children's book author who disappeared decades earlier. Thirty-year-old Bronwyn Newcastle Fordham disappeared from her home on the South Carolina coast in 1927, leaving behind an unpublished sequel to the novel she wrote as a precocious 12-year-old, which made her famous. In 1952, Bronwyn's daughter, Clara, gets a mysterious call from Charles Jameson, a Londoner who's just discovered a satchel in his recently deceased father's library filled with papers belonging to Bronwyn. Among the materials is a letter stipulating the satchel must be hand-delivered to Clara. She and her asthmatic eight-year-old daughter, Wynnie, arrive in London during the Great Smog, and they accept Charlie's invitation to stay at his mother's Lake District home, where the air is clearer. Clara feels very much at home on the pastoral landscape and finds a romantic spark with Charles. Henry imbues her story with lush descriptions of the landscape and intriguing linguistic puzzles as Clara attempts to decipher Bronwyn's dictionary of the invented language that was central to her work. Readers will be riveted. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A woman travels from South Carolina to London to try to translate a book written by her long-lost mother. In 1952, Clara Harrington, a divorcée with a young daughter, is an elementary school art teacher and children's book illustrator who's recently won the Caldecott Medal; despite her good life, she's haunted by the 1927 disappearance of her mother, Bronwyn Newcastle Fordham. Bronwyn, who had written a bestselling book in her own unique language as a child, vanished on the night the family house caught fire, killing a fireman and injuring the 8-year-old Clara. Now Clara receives a call from a man named Charlie Jameson, who, while cleaning out his late father's library in London, found a set of papers marked "For Clara Harrington only," with her address and phone number attached, and a note saying they must be delivered in person. They include a dictionary that Clara immediately realizes could be used to translate her mother's sequel, written in the odd language she had made up. Charlie invites Clara to his family home in London, but upon arriving with her asthmatic daughter, Wynnie, the Great Smog of 1952 forces the trio to the Lake District. There, Clara uncovers connections she didn't expect: Eliza Walker, the author for whom she has illustrated numerous books without ever meeting, lives in the area and turns out to have adapted her mother's first book into a play. Clara becomes convinced that the Lake District holds more answers to the mystery of her mother's disappearance. Though the setup is intriguing, the novel is overly long and meandering and fails to provide satisfying answers to the mysteries at its heart. This novel will leave readers wishing for more. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.