Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Fatal Flying Affair
The Fatal Flying Affair | T. E. Kinsey
5 posts | 6 read
August 1911. Emily Hardcastle and her inimitable lady's maid Florence Armstrong are enjoying a fine summer until Harry, Lady H's brother, turns up out of the blue with a mystery for them to solve. A routine parachute test at a local aeroplane factory has gone horribly wrong--with pilot Dickie Dupree plummeting to his death. Harry is certain there is more to this 'tragic accident' than meets the eye, having discovered that someone at the airfield is leaking top secret intelligence to foreign rivals. In between strolls to the Dog & Duck and planning for the annual village show, the daring duo dust off the Crime Board and go undercover at Bristol Aviation. With international powers investing heavily in aeronautics, the stakes are high--sky high--and the suspects soon mount up. Can Lady Hardcastle find the culprit before someone else falls down dead?
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Robotswithpersonality
post image
Pickpick

I honestly don't know how to praise this series without it sounding like a cliche. Kinsey is able to both reliably deliver the aspects of the series I love: banter, sprinkling of historical detail, bucolic moments of leisure and dining, a raft of characters I'm happy to see again, and Armstrong kicking ass. He's also able to 'keep it fresh'.This particular book felt like it focused a lot more on Armstrong separate from Hardcastle, 1/?

Robotswithpersonality 2/? not in going their separate ways, but letting Armstrong have more of the focus of the action within the plot, doing the hangar investigation, being first at the flight controls, having Hardcastle be so very put out when Armstrong's life was threatened, Armstrong's journey with the village show, Hardcastle and Armstrong negotiating the advantages of being perceived as a lady's maid, the societal expectations and the reality of their friendship 4mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/4 of equals, that respect being something that extends out to their friend group which represents a number of levels in the class system. It's like the author was a tad worried that as much as the story is always told from Armstrong's perspective, as it's A Lady Hardcastle mystery series, Armstrong was just becoming the quippy sidekick while Hardcastle figured out the mystery. This one very much focused on Armstrong's value and capabilities. 4mo
Robotswithpersonality 4/4 And as always, I had a good time! 4mo
5 likes3 comments
quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

Painfully relatable.

quote
Robotswithpersonality
post image

New (to me) word discovery!
Hypocorism: a pet name, the use of pet names.
In Late Latin and Greek, the words hypocorisma and hypokorisma had the same meaning as hypocorism does in English today. They in turn evolved from the Greek verb hypokorizesthai (“to call by pet names“), which itself comes from korizesthai (“to caress“). 💡

willaful I have a raging case of Hypocorism! 4mo
8 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
howjessicareads
post image
Pickpick

I read this on January 6th. 😲😅🇺🇸 #howjessreads2021