cover image A Place of Secrets

A Place of Secrets

Rachel Hore. Holt, $15 trade paper (400p) ISBN 978-0-8050-9449-7

In her U.S. debut, Hore (The Glass Painter’s Daughter) painstakingly builds the foundation of a 300-year-old mystery centered around an 18th-century astronomer and the strange observation deck from which he viewed the stars. Jude Gower, a book appraiser for London’s Beecham’s Auctioneers, is contacted by an 18th-century–book enthusiast interested in selling his collection. She travels to Robert Wickham’s estate in Norfolk, coincidentally home to her grandmother and sister, to review the tomes. Once there, she begins piecing together the history of the books, which include journals by Anthony Wickham, Robert’s ancestor and an eccentric astronomer, who along with his adopted daughter, Esther, may have stumbled upon a planetary discovery. Sensing that this could increase the books’ value, Jude digs deeper into the past, and unravels a world of Gypsies, ghosts, and possible murder at the scene of Wickham’s folly—a decrepit observatory in the woods. By dredging up long-kept secrets, is she putting her family in danger, or helping prevent it? Though bogged down by details, the plot catches fire in the last third, making the payoff almost worth the patience it took to get there. (Feb.)