At the beginning of the year I chose The Jungle by Upton Sinclair for the 2020 Back to the Classics Challenge - choose a classic with nature in the title. But this has been a tough year, as we all know, and with the year coming to a close I wanted a book that was fun and entertaining and so I went with Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart published 1956
According to Mystery Scene Magazine, Mary Stewart along with Victoria Holt and Phyllis Whitney are the "Grandes Dames of modern romantic suspense". They wrote hugely popular novels from the 1940's on through to the 1990's. and yet I had never read them. I decided to change that by giving Mary Stewart a try and I found Wildfire at Midnight to be a very enjoyable read. I can see why fans continue to collect and treasure Stewart's books.
And so when Wildfire at Midnight begins it is 1953 and the city of London is preparing for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. We are introduced to Gianetta Brooke, the young narrator at the center of this novel. Gianetta lives in London and works as a model for a fashion house. She has an ex-husband Nicholas Drury who she still has feelings for but the marriage broke up three years prior due to Nicholas' affairs. But, as Gianetta tells us, there were problems with their marriage from the start:
"I was wildly, madly, dumbly in love with him, of course, a silly little star-dazzled adolescent, plunged into a life completely strange and rather terrifying. And Nicolas, it became very quickly apparent, wasn't on his own ground either. What he had meant to marry was a modern Gianetta Fox, a composed young sophisticate who could hold her own in the fast moving society to which he was accustomed; what he'd actually got was Gianetta Brooke, not long out of school, whose poise was a technique very recently acquired in Montfiore's salons and the Mayfair mannequin factory".
Gianetta Fox was Gianetta's great grandmother who in 1858 arrived in London at age 17 and was "painted by every painter who mattered" and she led a scandalous life. Gianetta is not the adventurous spirit her great grandmother was. She is reserved and practical and with the hustle and bustle in London surrounding the coronation, she needs a break.
So Gianetta decides to spend a few weeks in Camasunary in the Isle of Skye, a beautuful mountainous region of Scotland where she can relax and think about her life. But soon after she arrives in Camasunary, Gianetta discovers that her ex-husband Nicholas is staying at the same hotel and as if that weren't uncomfortable enough she also learns that two weeks prior to her arrival a young woman in the area was murdered. The police suspect that the culprit is one of the guests staying at the hotel. The guests suspect each other.
As to why Gianetta upon hearing all of this doesn't get in her car and drive back to London or why the other guests remain at the hotel with a murderer on the loose, that does stretch credibility a bit. But then agaiin Gianetta, like every amateur sleuth before her, is determined to solve the mystery. The presence of her ex-husband Nicholas at the hotel who she still has feelings for might also be playing a part in her decision to stay.
Wildfire at Midnight is probably more mystery than romantic suspense but the romance is there too and Gianetta is a heroine with depth, courage, intelligence and heart. I also liked the chemistry between Gianetta and Nicholas. Their marriage may have ended but they still, despite the anger and bitterness, belong together. This is my first time reading Mary Stewart but it won't be my last.
I had barely heard of Stewart. This sounds like a very fun book and a good read for these times.
ReplyDeleteMarried couples who continue relationships after divorce are interesting in literature. It is also common in real life and such relationships often produce surprises.
Hi Brian, Stewart is really good. They say that her best book is Nine Coaches Waiting which I plan to read. Agree about married couples who continue to have a relationship after divorce and certainly if they have kids its a bond that will never leave. But even if no kids are involved as with Gianetta and Nicholas people who marry did so for love and that doesn't always end just because the marriage does.
DeleteMary Stewart is one of my favorite authors. Nine Coaches Waiting is my absolute favorite book of hers, with Thornyhold a close second. But all her books are fun reads. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Lark, I have wanted to read Mary Stewart for some time now. Gianetta Brooke was a well drawn intelligent and brave heroine and I'm thinking many of Stewart's heroines fit that description.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read Mary Stewart in a long time, but I remember enjoying her books a great deal.
ReplyDeleteHi Jenclair, Its my first outing reading Mary Stewart and I must say I had a very good time. I also want to try out Phyllis Whitney and Victoria Holt. There are so many books out there and just when you worry that you've read it all a new and exciting author comes along.
DeleteOh my goodness! A Mary Stewart I haven't heard of, much less read. Sounds wonderful and so much better than The Jungle, which I read in college and have no desire to reread.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds perfect in so many ways - timeframe, location, characters.
I first discovered Mary Stewart as a child - my mom used to get English magazines that serialized her novels in the 1960s. They had wonderfully lurid (for me as an 8-year-old!) illustrations that hooked my on Stewart. The Moonspinners is great, and other favorites are They Ivy Tree, This Rough Magic (a riff on The Tempest), Touch Not the Cat, Nice Coaches Waiting, and her Merlin series (The Crystal Caves, The Hollow Hills, The Last Enchantment). I have Thoryhold on my TBR shelf--maybe I should read that this winter!
Hi Jane, Thanks for letting me know about your favorite Stewart novels. I am definitely going to read them and, wow, serialized Mary Stewart novels in magazines with illustrations! That used to be the way novels were introduced to readers and also the novels themselves in the 1950's with the wonderful book covers which really put one in the mood for the story. As I get older the Kindle works better for me but why can't the publishing houses go back to those gothic pulpy covers of the 1930's-1950's. There is a market out there!
ReplyDeleteI agree -- I love gothic, pulpy covers. The trashier, the better!
DeleteI've only read one of Stewart's gothic mysteries. It was called Touch Not The Cat. The plot did strain credulity at times, but it was certainly entertaining and I would like, some day, to read more from these titles. But first, I really want to re-read her Merlin series. I have a copy of the first book, The Crystal Cave, on my shelf. I just need to work it into my reading schedule!
ReplyDeleteHi Ruthiella, I would like to check out the Crystal Cave too. I have heard her best novel is Nine Coaches Waiting. On the subject of romantic suspense I need to read Rebecca by Daphne DuMaurier. Never read it.
ReplyDeleteI have read Mary Stewart but very long ago. In 2018 or 2019 I bought four paperbacks by this author,including Nine Coaches Waiting. This one sounds good, especially if it is more mystery than romantic suspense. I especially like that it begins at the same time as the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. I was five years old at the time and had a doll that I called Elizabeth because she looked like her.
ReplyDeleteAnd all the other recommendations for her books in the comments are a plus.
Hi Tracy, it was my first time reading Mary Stewart and it was a good experience. The coronation of Queen Elizabeth II must have been something and she has been a very good Queen to have maintained her poise and her grace and service to the British people all these years. Its not an easy job because one is living in a fish bowl with the spotlight always on but Queen Elizabeth has handled it with such professionalism.
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