8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This Series Just Keeps Getting Better and Better!, 11 Mar 2001
By H.E. Christensen - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Mischief in the Snow (Mass Market Paperback)
This Series Just Keeps Getting Better and Better! Each Bracebridge Mystery has taken place at a different time of year, enabling Margaret Miles to embellish her fictional village of Bracebridge, Massachusetts with delightful seasonal highlights. The most recent of her four books, "A Mischief in the Snow", wraps a most fascinating account of village life in the winter of 1766 around the intrigue of a breath-taking murder plot. From cover to cover, this book thoroughly entertained me. As I have found with all of these books, one part of me wanted to read quickly to follow the exciting and intriguing story line, while another part wanted to slow down and thoroughly soak up cozy old kitchens with freshly baked brown bread and warming fires. I absolutely loved Chapter 6, where she describes villagers gathering to watch blocks of ice being cut out of a frozen pond and loaded onto horse drawn wagons for delivery to ice houses. Women and children who have arrived on foot or by sleigh are setting out food and jugs of liquid refreshments. A young man is playing his violin for a group of villagers sitting by a roaring bonfire while skaters are racing by on blades of steel, antler or bone. But of course, in the wintry woods nearby, an event of a much more sinister nature is occurring and it isn't by any means the only evil or dishonest act that will occur in this village, where deception is in the air. And this is what keeps the reader turning those pages late into the night. I highly recommend "A Mischief in the Snow" to everyone. I also think that it would be an excellent addition to any reading list for students of American history. While Miles' books are extremely entertaining and readable, they are also very well written and historically accurate, making them perfect material for the classroom.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A teriffic colonial mystery, 15 Feb 2001
By Harriet Klausner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Mischief in the Snow (Mass Market Paperback)
In the winter of 1766 in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Charlotte Willet goes ice skating on the nearby Musketaquid River. All by herself, Charlotte enjoys her time gliding on the frozen river until a thin section of ice cracks sending her into the freezing water. She manages to pull herself out of the icy water. However, Charlotte realizes that Boar Island, the home of two female hermits, is much closer than her house in Braceville. Realizing that only teenager Alexander Godwin visits the ladies when he delivers items to the isolated females, Charlotte prudently pays a visit on wealthy Catherine Knowles and her companion Magdalena. Charlotte finds her host strange, but kind.
Not too long after that, Charlotte's employee Lem Wainwright gets into a public spat with the obnoxious Alex, but nothing except threats occurs. However, soon Lem finds the murdered body of Alex. Lem is the obvious suspect having just had a fight with the victim just before his death and also having conveniently found the corpse. Charlotte, with the help of her neighbor Richard Longfellow, begins investigating who killed Alex.
The fourth entry in the Willet colonial mystery series, A MISCHIEF IN THE SNOW, is an entertaining entry that lives up to its well-written predecessors. The story line provides readers with an engaging who-done-it, several enchanting characters especially Charlotte, and a deep look into Colonial America outside the Boston area. Margaret Miles makes Massachusetts circa 1760s a fun place for readers to visit.
Harriet Klausner
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Yet Another Entry to an Excellent Series, 30 May 2001
By P. Bigelow - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Mischief in the Snow (Mass Market Paperback)
This the fourth in the series set in colonial Bracebridge, Massachusetts. It is the winter of 1766, and when Charlotte Willett, a widow of some standing within the village, goes skating, she falls through the ice near Boar Island. After managing to extricate herself from the water, the island's two eccentric elderly women take her in, warm her up, and dry her sodden clothing. While on Boar Island, she finds out that one of the villager's young men takes supplies to the two ladies, and that, other than those weekly supply runs, the two women live in isolation - apparently quite happily. Soon thereafter, the young man is killed. In the meantime, counterfeited shillings begin turning up in Boston and Bracebridge. When there is yet another death, Charlotte is convinced that the two deaths are somehow related, but she can't figure out why. And how do the counterfeit shilling fit into it? She and her neighbor, Richard Longfellow, investigate because neither trusts the drunken sheriff not to take the easy way out by accusing her young boarder who was seen arguing with the young man.
This is another excellent entry in this series. The characters are interesting and carefully drawn. The plot has enough twists and turns to satisfy any reader. Miles invokes colonial Massachusetts without letting the history interfere with the story. She writes so well you can feel the biting cold of a New England winter seep into your bones even if you are sitting in 80 degree weather.