The Tale of Holly How
(The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter)
by Susan Wittig Albert
Berkley Pub Group
July 1, 2005
ISBN #0425202747
320 pages
Hardcover
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Other Books by
Susan Wittig Albert

Spanish Dagger

Nightshade

The Tale of Hawthorn House

Bleeding Hearts

Spanish Dagger

The Tale of Cuckoo Brow Wood

China Bayles' Book of Days

The Tale Of Holly How

The Tale Of Cuckoo Brow Wood

Bleeding Hearts

Dead Man's Bones

The Tale Of Hill Top Farm

Dilly Of A Death

Dead Man's Bones

Murder Most Crafty

Thyme of Death

The Tale Of Hill Top Farm

An Untimely Death and Other Garden Mysteries

A Dilly of a Death

Indigo Dying

Bloodroot

REVIEW

"A charming adorable amateur sleuth tale"

After the death of her fiancé, children's author and illustrator Beatrix Potter buys Hill Top Farm in the Lake District village of Near Sawrey. After a period of adjustment, Miss Potter and the villagers accommodate one another as she has the farmhouse renovated so she can live there when she isn't needed by her parents in London, particularly her mother who is always demands Beatrix help her with her "nothing" crisis.

Miss Potter buys sheep from local shepherd Ben Hornby, but when she arrives to collect them, she finds him dead with evidence proving he was murdered. Miss Potter also befriends sad Caroline, whose grandmother, Lady Longford doesn't want to know her since she disowned her granddaughter's father (her son) for not marrying the women she had picked for him. Caroline overhears the governess Ms. Marline plotting to pull a stunt with a person applying for the head school teacher position against her grandmother. Remembering Miss Potter's kindness on a previous excursion, she goes to her for help and she along with some of the locals set a trap to catch two very clever villains.

THE TALE OF THE HOLLY HOW is a charming adorable amateur sleuth tale set in a village where animals talk to help one another in the tradition of Sneaky Pie Brown. There is a sub-plot involving villagers sponsoring badger baiting (forcing badgers to fight with money bet on the outcome) until all the animals work together to break up this vile practice. Susan Witting Albert enables readers to see the world threw the magical eyes of Miss Beatrix Potter.

Harriet Klausner

Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted June 29, 2005



Summary

In the second Cottage Tales mystery, Miss Beatrix Potter has won over human and animal hearts alike in her new home, the sleepy village of Sawrey, England. Here, everyone—of both human and animal persuasion—has a good word to say about local shepherd Ben Hornby. But one day, Beatrix finds him dead in the meadow, and suspects foul play.



 

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