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The Taxidermist's Daughter by Kate…
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The Taxidermist's Daughter (original 2014; edition 2014)

by Kate Mosse

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6143838,222 (3.52)20
Joining her fellow English villagers in a misty churchyard on St. Mark's Eve, a taxidermist's daughter reflects on the mysterious downfall of her father's once-famous museum before discovering the body of a stranger whose death unlocks dark memories.
Member:wigsonthegreen
Title:The Taxidermist's Daughter
Authors:Kate Mosse
Info:Orion (2014), Hardcover, 432 pages
Collections:Read in 2014 (inactive), Fiction
Rating:****
Tags:Read 2014

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The Taxidermist's Daughter by Kate Mosse (2014)

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English (35)  Dutch (3)  All languages (38)
Showing 1-5 of 35 (next | show all)
Constantia ("Connie") Gifford, age 22, lives with her father in Blackthorn House, an older mansion in the region of Sussex, in the early 1900's. Though her father previously had some minor fame as a taxidermist in a well-known museum, he now spends many of his hours at the local bar, drinking his days away. Connie, who accidentally fell down the stairs 10 years earlier, doesn't have much memory of the events which took place in her younger years. When the body of a young woman is found near Blackthorn House, small pieces of memory begin to emerge in Connie's mind. Meanwhile, her father disappears, as does the father of a young man in town. Within the span of 2-3 days, as odd events take place and Connie begins to retrieve some of her memories, more questions than answers seem to come to the forefront.

It's been a while since I've read Kate Mosse. In general, her story descriptions pull me in, and while she is a good writer, sometimes her writing is overly detailed and more lengthy than it needs to be. This story has a Gothic, dark feeling to it, with slowly revealed details which gradually unfold the story. I liked this for the most part, and I didn't feel it was dragged out quite as long as some of her earlier novels. The biggest problem I had with this one was that I had trouble keeping track of all the male characters in this novel, and due to the plot, it was necessary to do so. Having listened to this on audio, I think that made things more difficult to track, and I suspect I could've followed things a little easier in print. Nevertheless, I mostly liked this one. It was very atmospheric, if you're into that sort of thing. ( )
  indygo88 | Jan 13, 2024 |
I needed a reading break from more serious fare, and I decided to read this throwback gothic written in 2014 but set in 1912. The heroine, Connie, is a single woman living with her father, a too often inebriated but once successful taxidermist. Connie suffers some severe memory loss that dates from her twelfth year and an accident that injured her head and was barely survived. Of course, the plot is strung around her recovery of that memory and the events that occurred at that time but are influencing a present day mystery that involves a murder and several disappearances.

Mosse does a good job of capturing the more macabre elements of the gothic, but there is little in the way of surprise here. I certainly could have drawn a straight line from the beginning to the end of the novel and never have strayed off course for a second. I picked the love interests outcomes, the major bad guy and the motive long before the reveals. Still, it was a bit of fun and served its purpose. ( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
This is the third book I've read by Kate Mosse. I thoroughly enjoyed The Winter Ghosts, and couldn't get through Labyrinth, so with the book with the interesting title I decided to give her a third chance.

It was a good quick read, and the writing was very good, with a good fast pace and effortless flow. There were a lot of characters to remember but they were all well described and I never lost track of who was who. There were quite a few names with crow references in them (which I'm guessing was deliberate), and quite a few names beginning with C (which may also have been deliberate).

This is a gothic novel, which I didn't know to begin with but quickly became apparent as there were quite a few elements of gothic tales scattered throughout. I was a little disappointed at how unoriginal the story turned out to be, with gatherings of crows and sudden storms and suchlike, and a main character who lost memories of certain events that gradually resurfaced throughout the book, which was used as a way of introducing a sinister backstory. The story became predictable, and I had worked out the ending about half way through, but it was interesting to see it unfold nonetheless.

Going back to the characters in the book, I was a little bit disappointed in the main character, who through her memories sets the scene that leads up to the main events in the book. Unfortunately I found that was all she was really there for, and the story would have turned out the same had she not been present at all.

I gave the story three stars as I enjoyed it overall, and the writing was very good, but I wish the story had been a little more original and the characters more developed. ( )
  Triduana | Jan 25, 2022 |
Don't believe the blurb. The truth is that the author appears to equate wordiness with atmosphere in this book, and melodrama with plot, while the characters are as dull as the turbid waters of Fishbourne Creek. I made it to p. 65 before giving up. My time is better spent elsewhere. ( )
  passion4reading | Jul 18, 2021 |
Wonderful, Gothic novel. Dark, mysterious characters. I oved it. The descriptions from the old taxidermy book did make me squirm a little but definitely added to the atmosphere. ( )
  scot2 | Dec 21, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 35 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
Dedication
As always, for my beloved Greg, Martha and Felix
Also for my wonderful nieces and nephews, 
Emma, Anthony (aka Gizz), Richard, Jessica, Lottie, Bryony, TH, Toby, EH and Zachery
First words
Midnight. In the graveyard of the church of St Peter & St Mary, men gather in silence of the edge of the drowned marshes.
Quotations
Information from the Dutch Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to your language.
Ik herinner mij een apotheker, hier in de buurt[...]
en in zijn armzalige winkel hangt een schildpad, een opgezette krokodil
en andere huiden van monsterlijke vissen.

- William Shakespeare, Romeo en Julia 1597
Het is, antwoordde de schone dame,
bijna Sint Marcus, nog even,
en alles waar oude tradities van verhalen
geloof ik met angst en beven.
Hoe, als straks 't middernacht'lijk uur slaat
over groene kerkhofpaden
een rouwstoet van veroordeelde zielen gaat
gehuld in dunne gewaden
De geesten van hen die de dood zal roepen
in 't voor ons liggende jaar
schrijden langs in verdoemde grauwe troepen
door de doodse stilte, zo naar.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Joining her fellow English villagers in a misty churchyard on St. Mark's Eve, a taxidermist's daughter reflects on the mysterious downfall of her father's once-famous museum before discovering the body of a stranger whose death unlocks dark memories.

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