Born in a Mission in China, Lucy Waring finds herself with fifteen small children to feed and care for. How she tackles this heavy task leads to her being thrown into the grim prison of Chengfu, where she meets Nicholas Sabine - a man about to die. He asks her the same cryptic riddle that Robert Falcon, another 'foreign devil', has asked her only the day before, and the mystery of this riddle echoes through all that befalls Lucy in the months that follow, when she is brought to England and tries to make a new life with the ...
Read More
Born in a Mission in China, Lucy Waring finds herself with fifteen small children to feed and care for. How she tackles this heavy task leads to her being thrown into the grim prison of Chengfu, where she meets Nicholas Sabine - a man about to die. He asks her the same cryptic riddle that Robert Falcon, another 'foreign devil', has asked her only the day before, and the mystery of this riddle echoes through all that befalls Lucy in the months that follow, when she is brought to England and tries to make a new life with the Gresham family. Unused to English ways, she is constantly in disgrace and is soon involved in the long and bitter feud between the Greshams and the family who live across the valley in the house called Moonrakers. There is danger, romance and heartache for Lucy, and there is mystery within mystery as strange events build to a point when she begins to doubt her own senses. How could she see a man long dead, walking in the misty darkness of the valley? Who carried her unconscious into the labyrinth of the Chislehurst Caves and left her to die? It is not until she returns to China, a country now at war, that Lucy finds amid high adventure the answers to all that has baffled her. It is here, too, at the darkest moment when all seems lost, that she at last finds where her heart belongs.
Read Less
This is an exceptional gothic novel that contains an astonishing amount of detail. A hallmark of Madeleine Brent's novels are the incredibly detailed descriptions of the landscapes the story takes place in. Out of all the novels Madeleine Brent wrote, Moonraker's Bride takes the crown as the most extensively detailed book. The heroine is very strong and very brave and the story is not a classic romance like many gothic novels because it doesn't revolve around the relationship of the heroine and a particular hero. It's a very complete story in of itself and it focuses more on the character of the heroine, her incredible journey, and the effect her unique presence has on others. Romance is of course a factor but the way it develops may be a surprise to someone used to reading classic gothic romance novels. If you are looking for sweeping landscapes, detailed story-telling and a refreshingly honest, courageous heronine, Moonraker's Bride would be an enjoyable read. I was very happy to add it to my collection.