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Susan Elia MacNeal (born 1968) is an American author best known for her Maggie Hope Series of novels set during World War II, mainly in London. [1] While the initial books are mysteries, and Maggie is a secretary and mathematics tutor to Princess Elizabeth, she is subsequently recruited by the part of the wartime intelligence services known as the Special Operations Executive.
Wintertime is the season for curling up under a fleecy blanket with a good book, but if your to-be-read list needs some sprucing up, here's some news you'll enjoy: Goodreads just unveiled its top ...
Tah's hogan burns down; Maggie suspects Neizghání. In the carnage, Maggie and Kai kill a corrupt police officer. They seek shelter with Grace Goodacre, a local bar owner. Maggie, Kai, and Grace's children begin working together. Mósí promises to give the fire drill to the winner of a duel. Maggie agrees and is ordered to fight Neizghání.
Great Circle received very favorable reviews, with a cumulative "Rave" rating at the review aggregator website Book Marks, based on 23 book reviews from mainstream literary critics. [8] The novel debuted at number fourteen on The New York Times Hardcover fiction best-seller list for the week ending May 8, 2021. [9]
“The Miracle Club” may not be a faith-based movie in the traditional sense (that is, a film made with an explicitly evangelical Christian agenda), but this Ireland-set art-house offering is a ...
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The Golden Bowl's intense focus on its four main characters gives the novel both its tremendous power and its peculiar feeling of claustrophobia. [1] Henry James himself had a high regard for his last work, describing it to his American publisher as "distinctly the most done of my productions ― the most composed and constructed and completed...I hold the thing the solidest, as yet, of all my ...
2/5 Thaddeus O’Sullivan’s faith-based drama is exactly the sort of film you suspect was made to cater to American, rather than Irish, tastes