Irish Daily Mail

EITHNE FARRY

- by Gill Hornby

MISS AUSTEN (Century €15.20) ‘WHOEVER looked at an elderly lady and saw the young heroine she once was?’ asks the steadfast and unfashiona­bly dutiful Cassandra Austen, as she looks back on her life and role as gatekeeper of the literary legacy of younger sister, Jane.

Austen aficionado­s have looked askance at Cassandra’s wilful destructio­n of her famous sibling’s letters, but here, in a tender and touching recreation of their relationsh­ip, the (imagined) correspond­ence is the key that unlocks the plot.

This details Cassandra’s longago love for her dead fiance, Tom

Fowle, and her protection of witty, mercurial, depressive Jane. It also reveals the particular difficulti­es of being an unmarried woman in Regency England, short of money and options.

Hornby deftly describes the psychologi­cal toll that such uncertaint­y took on Jane, and movingly celebrates the fortitude of Cassandra, whose greatest love was her sister.

HITLER’S SECRETS by Rory Clements

(Zaffre €15.20) THIS is the fourth outing for academic adventurer Tom Wilde, who leaves his cosy Cambridge college on a dangerous mission, where hidden agendas and double-crosses make for a twisty, tense thriller.

Tasked by the British Security Service, in cahoots with the US, to remove a secret ‘package’ from Berlin, Wilde hastily heads off with an alias and a vague plan. This is swiftly scuppered when he realises that the ‘package’ is a person, whose identity is of crucial importance to the Nazis — Hitler in particular.

Bormann, the Fuhrer’s righthand man, sends evil Otto Kalt to violently ensure the secret is kept. Torture, murder and mayhem follow the affable Wilde as he encounters stock villains, indulges in some stilted stiffupper-lip dialogue and attempts to outwit his enemies in this enjoyable slice of espionage.

THE LADY OF THE RAVENS by Joanna Hickson

(HarperColl­ins €20.99) JOAN VAUX, who is in the service of

Queen consort Elizabeth of York, is a capable, self-possessed ladyin-waiting who keeps a watchful eye on the ravens at the Tower of London, whose flighty behaviour is superstiti­ously linked to the stability of the kingdom.

The Wars of the Roses have ended and a tentative peace has been establishe­d, but the incipient Tudor world is still turbulent.

Hickson colourfull­y captures life at court, with vivid descriptio­ns of feasts, festivitie­s and fashion, and adds a dash of amour among the astute matrimonia­l alliances.

Joan, who is wary of marriage and motherhood, is awarded a rosy romance, but trouble is brewing as Prince Arthur, older brother of the future Henry VIII, marries Catherine of Aragon, in a somewhat abrupt ending to an otherwise engaging novel.

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