Matthew Barr was in the crosshairs.
Finally.
Finn Garrett watched him lock the battered old Focus and sling a backpack over one shoulder. There was a woman with him - young, and with her mousy hair tied back...
The Blurb
On a summer’s evening in 1926, six-year-old Celie Shepherd is hungry and desperate and not where a six-year-old should be. Instead, she is dangling from a cliff, far above the sea, reaching out to pocket an impossibly beautiful thing.
This bold theft will change the course of Celie’s life, and the lives of others.
One hundred years later, a house is ransacked. The only thing missing: a dusty case containing that same impossible thing.
What could conceivably be so important that it is stolen again and again (and perhaps yet again…)?
My Review
Written with a dual timeline, this book kept me hooked throughout.
The book begins on a Yorkshire cliff in 1920 where the locals are scavenging for birds' eggs. This is partly how they make their living – taking eggs from their nests and selling them to collectors or their agents. I am glad to say that this is an illegal activity in the UK now.
However, when young Celie is dangling from a rope over the cliff edge, she finds eggs that are so unusual, collectors are willing to pay a pretty high price for them.
Celie is the main character in the part of the novel set in the past. She is only six years old when the novel begins and it follows her through to adulthood. Malnourishment meant that she would take the risk of dangling over a cliff edge to collect eggs, initially just so she and her family could have an omelette for their tea. She is a sweet and vulnerable child whom, as a reader, I felt very protective towards and feared for her safety.
In the present-day part of the book, we meet Patrick and his neighbour and friend, Weird Nick. Apparently, Patrick was introduced to readers in the author's previous book, Rubbernecker. However, I haven't read that book and this works very well as a standalone novel. Patrick is neurodivergent and his friendship with Nick often lent the novel some humour. They are both highly likeable characters and a joy to read about.
When Nick stumbles across an egg in his loft and attempts to sell it on eBay, he sets in motion a series of events that neither he nor Patrick could have foreseen.
This is a highly readable and, at times, exciting book to read. Prior to reading this, I did not know much about egg collecting and thus, I found it educational as well as a great novel to enjoy.
It is well written and the book moves back and forth in time seamlessly. The author has researched her book very well, some of which is based on real-life events. It blends the past and present beautifully. There were sufficient twists and turns in the plot to keep me reading.
The characterisation is outstanding and I was sorry when I finished the book and had to leave Celie, Nick and Patrick behind. Each of them are adorable characters in their own individual way.
The book has a terrific ending of which I shall say no more. It has a historical and contemporary plot which meld together beautifully. I recommend this book to you as I do not think you will be disappointed.
I would love to hear your thoughts on this book. Have you read any of Belinda Bauer's books before?
Book Details
ISBN: 978 1804997888
Publisher: Penguin
Formats: e-book, audio, hardback and paperback
No. of Pages: 416 (paperback)
Purchase Links
Bookshop.org
Amazon UK
Amazon US
About the Author
BELINDA BAUER grew up in England and South Africa and now lives in Wales. She worked as a journalist and a screenwriter before finally writing a book to appease her nagging mother.
For her debut, Blacklands, Belinda was awarded the CWA Gold Dagger for Crime Novel of the Year. She went on to win the CWA Dagger in the Library for her body of work. Her fourth novel, Rubbernecker, was voted Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year. Her eighth novel, Snap, was a Sunday Times bestseller. It was longlisted for the Man Booker prize and voted Crime Thriller Book of the Year at the Specsavers National Book Awards.
You can also find Belinda at:
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(all opinions are my own)
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