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    Ann reported on The Winter People by Jennifer McMahon (Anchor 2015)
    West Hall, Vermont, has always been a town of strange disappearances and old legends. The
    most mysterious is that of Sara Harrison Shea, who, in 1908, was found dead in the field behind
    her house just months after the tragic death of her daughter.
    Now, in present day, nineteen-year-old Ruthie lives in Sara’s farmhouse with her mother, Alice,
    and her younger sister. Alice has always insisted that they live off the grid, a decision that has
    weighty consequences when Ruthie wakes up one morning to find that Alice has vanished. In
    her search for clues, she is startled to find a copy of Sara Harrison Shea's diary hidden beneath
    the floorboards of her mother's bedroom. As Ruthie gets sucked into the historical mystery, she
    discovers that she’s not the only person looking for someone that they’ve lost. But she may be
    the only one who can stop history from repeating itself.
    Creepy, goosebumpy, scary ghost stories aren't only for cool fall evenings. It turns out that the
    middle of January in remote Vermont when it's buried in snow is also the perfect setting for a
    psychological thriller filled with ghosts.
    Written by Jennifer McMahon, this is two stories in one with the common factor the setting of an
    old farmhouse on a secluded road in the very small town of West Hall, Vermont. The stories
    alternate: One takes place in January 1908, including flashbacks about 20 years earlier. The
    other takes place in the present day, also in January. This thickly-wooded homestead includes
    an outcropping of giant boulders that looks so much like a hand, the area has always been
    called Devil's Hand. Wander too far into the woods, and you might not make it out alive.
    Something is going on here, and those who have seen it believe there are ghosts in this spooky
    forest.
    It's January 1908. Sara Harrison Shea and her husband Martin Shea live in the farmhouse with
    their little girl, Gertie, who is 8 years old. One day she is found dead, having fallen 50 feet down
    a well. Sara collapses in grief, but writes her fears, anguish, and hopes into a secret diary. Sara
    comes to an untimely and gruesome death, which remains the stuff of legend in West Hall a
    hundred years later. She hid her diary in one of the hidey-holes in the old farmhouse, and many
    people want to find it because in it she supposedly left instructions on how to raise the dead to
    life.
    Meanwhile in the present-day, Alice Washburne lives in the same farmhouse with her two
    daughters, Ruthie, 19, and Fawn, 6. Alice, who is widowed, has lived off the grid for about 20
    years. No computer. No cell phone. No links to anyone in the world. Even in this small town, not
    everyone knows who she is. On New Year's Day, Alice disappears. More than anything, Alice
    dislikes the police, so Ruthie knows she shouldn't call the cops. (This is one of several plot
    points—some small, some big—that make the mystery work. If Ruthie did call the cops or
    someone didn't lock her cell phone in the car so she didn't have it when she really needed it,
    things would have worked out quite differently. A little cheesy, perhaps.) The two stories—past
    and present—converge as Ruthie discovers dark secrets about her own past and those
    surrounding this strange house.
    This is one of the creepiest stories I have ever read, and while the plots from both time periods
    are rather farfetched, the book is a page-turner. It will keep you up past your bedtime, and if you
    read it then, you may very well have nightmares.
    Tracey's book was A Dark and Snowy Night by Sally Goldenbaum, #5 in the Seaside Knitters
    Mystery Series (Kensington 2022)
    It’s holiday season in the picturesque, coastal town of Sea Harbor, Massachusetts! But in USA
    Today bestselling author Sally Goldenbaum’s latest Seaside Knitters Society mystery, the
    knitting club sleuths will have to take a break from crafting cozy Christmas gifts to investigate a
    murder at the Mayor’s holiday party.
    Winter in Sea Harbor is a feast for the senses—crackling bonfires, the scent of snow in the salty
    air, carols ringing out on the village green. This year, the Seaside Knitters have a sackful of
    obligations in addition to their usual Christmas preparations. Izzy is so overloaded with knitting
    classes that she hires an extra salesperson, but the new addition has trouble fitting into the yarn
    shop’s holiday spirit. Cass, juggling the stresses of running her lobster fishery, has finally found
    a nanny for her active toddler. Molly Flanigan seems practically perfect in every way—until she
    suddenly disappears, taking Cass’s beloved rescue mutt with her...
    Meanwhile, the holidays are kicking off in style at Mayor Beatrice Scaglia’s holiday party, where
    a well-dressed crowd admires the mayor’s sumptuous new home and the celebrity chef catering
    the event. An additional treat for Ben and Nell Endicott at the festive affair is reconnecting with a
    dear college friend, Oliver Bishop. But it’s not just reunions and the appetizers that are to-die-for.
    Before the party-goers can toast the beginning of Sea Harbor’s festive season, the chef—and
    young wife of the Endicott’s old Harvard friend—is found dead beneath the mistletoe.
    Izzy, Birdie, Nell, and Cass must uncover the pattern to these mysteries to remove suspicion
    from those they love, bring a murderer to justice—and keep Sea Harbor’s holiday magic from
    vanishing into the chill winter air...
    TRIVIA
    Last week's question was:
    Which mystery author was also a barrister?
    a. Linda Howard
    b. Patricia Moyes
    c. Eileen Dewshurst
    d. Nancy Spain
    The answer is c. Eileen Dewhurst. She wrote the Hilary Tamar series This series of four
    books, described as "legal whodunits", were written over a period of twenty years. Their primary
    setting is the top floor of 62 New Square at Lincoln's Inn where four young junior barristers have
    their chambers: Michael Cantrip, Desmond Ragwort, Selena Jardine and Timothy Shepherd.
    While the last named only appears sporadically, taxes barrister Julia Larwood, who works in the
    adjacent premises, is a regular visitor and is in effect the fifth member of the group. These
    characters are in some ways thinly drawn (Selena is highly organized and efficient, Julia is
    clumsy and chaotic, Cantrip is casual and modern, Ragwort is elegant and conservative), never
    communicating in anything other than an ironic tone, so that even when they are in deadly
    danger the atmosphere remains uniformly light-hearted.
    This week's question is:
    Author Gary Phillips has edited several anthologies over the years. One that won particular accolades was
    one that paid homage to a past president. Which one?
    a. Nixon
    b. Bush
    c. Washington
    d. Obama
    Tune in next week for the answer.

    Recent Episodes from Dark and Stormy Book Club

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    This week's question is:
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