The secret guests / Benjamin Black.
Momo rauemi: TextSeries: Thorndike Press large print core seriesKaiwhakaputa: Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage company, 2021Copyright date: ©2020Edition: Large print editionWhakaahuatanga: 455 pages (large print) ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781432880712
- 1432880713
- 823/.914 23
- PR6052.A57 S44 2020
Momo tuemi | Tauwāhi onāianei | Kohinga | Tau karanga | Tūnga | Rā oti | Waeherepae | Ngā puringa tuemi | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Large print | Manaia LibraryPlus Large print | Large print | BLAC (Tirotirohia te whatanga(Opens below)) | Wātea | i2217379 |
"A novel."
Ahead of the German Blitz during World War II, English parents from every social class sent their children to the countryside for safety, displacing more than three million young offspring. In The Secret Guests, the British royal family takes this evacuation a step further, secretly moving the princesses to the estate of the Duke of Edenmore in "neutral" Ireland. A female English secret agent, Miss Celia Nashe, and a young Irish detective, Garda Strafford, are assigned to watch over "Ellen" and "Mary" at Clonmillis Hall. But the Irish stable hand, the housemaid, the formidable housekeeper, the Duke himself, and other Irish townspeople, some of whom lost family to English gunshots during the War of Independence, go freely about their business in and around the great house. Soon suspicions about the guests' true identities percolate, a dangerous boredom sets in for the princesses, and, within and without Clonmillis acreage, passions as well as stakes rise. Benjamin Black, who has good information that the princesses were indeed in Ireland for a time during the Blitz, draws readers into a novel as fascinating as the nascent career of Miss Nashe, as tender as the homesickness of the sisters, as intriguing as Irish-English relations during WWII, and as suspenseful and ultimately action-packed as war itself.
There are no comments on this title.