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Escaping Notice

by Amy Corwin

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: The Archer Family (3)

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263889,980 (4)None
Hugh feels responsible after the drowning death of his younger brother, until he finds evidence to suggest the accident was a failed attempt to kill him, instead. Believed dead along with his brother, Hugh is determined to unmask the murderer. So he returns home in the disguise of a servant to search for the truth.After losing a valuable necklace at Hugh's last ball, Helen decides to retrieve it before anyone discovers it is missing. She is tired of being considered featherbrained, and impulsively returns to Hugh's home as a servant, sure she can find the necklace and escape without any difficulties.When Hugh and Helen meet, their loneliness draws them together, despite their secrets. Unfortunately, someone in the house seems determined to prevent both Helen and Hugh from attaining their goals. And the two must work together to unmask the killer, recover the necklace, and perhaps discover that what their hearts truly desire is love.… (more)
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Hugh Castle, the Earl of Monnow, is out on his boat with his brother when it sinks in a storm, taking his brother with it.
When he gets to shore, Hugh discovers the boat had been sabotaged so he goes to the Second Sons Inquiry Agency to have them assist him to look into who would have wanted to kill him. He keeps his survival to himself.
At the same time a young woman needs to sneak back to a Hugh's home to try to find a missing necklace she lost at a party there before her sister, or any of the rest of her family, discovers she's lost it.
As is usual in these novels, the two characters meet and muddy up the waters with their separate inquiries.
A fun read. ( )
  quiBee | Jan 21, 2016 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
This was a LibraryThing Member Giveaway, thank you.

The story: After having been missing for years, the Peckham necklace has recently been found, and upon invitation to the Earl of Monnow's ball Helen Archer begged to wear it there. And has just discovered that she lost it there. Terrified of revealing her ineptitude to her sister, and fixing on the slightly mad idea that notifying the host of the ball would make her shame public, she decides on a hare-brained scheme to go and find it herself.

Meanwhile, eleven-year-old Edward (Ned) rebels against hateful guardians and the prospect of being sent to what he has been told is an equally hateful uncle (the Earl of Monnow) and acts on a hare-brained scheme to run away by himself to London to join the Navy.

Meanwhile, the Earl of Monnow, Hugh Castle, is jilted in the middle of the above ball and takes off to clear his mind with a sail in his boat the Twilight, dragging his brother along with him – and when a storm comes up and the Twilight goes down he loses boat and brother both. He wakes up on a beach and walks and hitches his way to London to talk to his lawyer, concocting a hare-brained scheme to find out who damaged the boat to cause it to sink.

The three main characters – earl and lady and boy – converge in London and with varied layers of mistaken and assumed identities join forces to find the necklace, find out who scuttled the Twilight and killed Hugh's brother, and keep the boy out of danger and trouble until a suitable guardian can be found for him. Hijinks ensue as Helen takes a position as lady's maid to Hugh's elderly spinster aunt, Hugh poses as her brother and steward for his own estate; Ned is presented as the third sibling, available for potato peeling and boot blacking. In the course of the investigation for necklace and murderer, the two grownup undercover operatives learn about themselves and – both being free, attractive, and of marriageable age – each other.

This was, I think, meant as an enjoyable, light read – but it's not as light as it should have been. The murder hanging over Hugh's head darkens things considerably: was he the target? Will someone try again? Was it someone he knows and trusts? His brother is dead, and while at times he mourns, at other times he seems to forget the very fresh grief completely. More, he tells no one but his lawyer and a professional investigator any of the details, leaving anyone else who might care about him or his brother to suffer anxiety waiting for news. While Helen's strand of the story is almost as frothy as could be wished, this is – sometimes – grim, as everyone comes under suspicion, and Hugh begins to learn what he's never been conscious of before: what everyone else in his house thinks of him.

The justifications for the three main characters' adventures felt a bit thin. There just never seemed to be a reason for Helen to be so terrified and foolish as to set off on her own with little forethought to infiltrate the mansion; her sister does not seem to actually be an ogre, and for her uncle to encourage it as he does is very strange and very unlikely. Hugh's pigheadedness about revealing the boating "accident" and his brother's death is irritating. The boy's adventure takes the least stretching to accept; he's a boy who feels himself abused (later chapters make the psychological abuse stronger, but I didn't see it at the time; the aunts were upset because he kept a frog in a teapot, for heaven's sake – most women, especially of the time, would be a bit put out), and he fears being sent somewhere even worse, and runs away. The problem with him is that he is forgotten from the story for long stretches, until he is required to fling himself into danger and bring about a resolution. This lack of grounds for just about every action would be somewhat acceptable in an average fluffy regency romance; the overall tone certainly feels like same. But this strives to be a bit more, I think; the fact that it begins with a man failing to save his brother's life completely removes it from the start from the "madcap comedy" genre to which it otherwise seems to aspire, and actually makes the romance aspect a bit discordant. Also, the spinster aunt's abuse of Helen as her servant is a dark note that does not combine well with the silliness.

In short (!), the plot is half grim murder mystery, half madcap comedy, and half romance novel – oh, and half boys' adventure novel. There was a lot going on in this slender book; too much, really. ( )
  Stewartry | Sep 5, 2012 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
Amy Corwin's book Escaping Notice is a well written, amusing, mystery and romance book. Opening with drama ensures to catch any reader who loves a good mystery. Bringing in the wonderful characters continues to make this a good read! THe characters are fun and playful, yet serious and sometimes misguided! It is a very heartwarming ending that keeps the reader wanting to read more from Amy Corwin! ( )
  mjcela971 | Jun 18, 2012 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Amy Corwinprimary authorall editionscalculated
Urquhart, RuthNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Hugh feels responsible after the drowning death of his younger brother, until he finds evidence to suggest the accident was a failed attempt to kill him, instead. Believed dead along with his brother, Hugh is determined to unmask the murderer. So he returns home in the disguise of a servant to search for the truth.After losing a valuable necklace at Hugh's last ball, Helen decides to retrieve it before anyone discovers it is missing. She is tired of being considered featherbrained, and impulsively returns to Hugh's home as a servant, sure she can find the necklace and escape without any difficulties.When Hugh and Helen meet, their loneliness draws them together, despite their secrets. Unfortunately, someone in the house seems determined to prevent both Helen and Hugh from attaining their goals. And the two must work together to unmask the killer, recover the necklace, and perhaps discover that what their hearts truly desire is love.

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