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P.B. Ryan

Author of Still Life with Murder

44+ Works 3,157 Members 87 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Patricia Burford Ryan writes romance novels as Patricia Ryan, mystery novels as P.B. Ryan and erotica novels as Louisa Burton. She is the twin sister of Pamela Burford Loeser (Pamela Burford).

Series

Works by P.B. Ryan

Still Life with Murder (2003) 875 copies, 37 reviews
Murder in a Mill Town (2004) 214 copies, 8 reviews
Naughty or Nice? Four Novellas (2001) — Author — 201 copies, 1 review
Silken Threads (1999) 199 copies, 4 reviews
Death on Beacon Hill (2005) 189 copies, 5 reviews
Murder on Black Friday (2005) 165 copies, 6 reviews
Murder in the North End (2006) 156 copies, 2 reviews
A Bucket of Ashes (2007) 147 copies, 6 reviews
House of Dark Delights (2007) 131 copies, 4 reviews
Heaven's Fire (1996) 109 copies, 1 review
The Sun and the Moon (2000) 96 copies
Falcon's Fire (1995) 81 copies, 2 reviews
Burning Up: Tales of Erotic Romance (2003) — Contributor — 71 copies
Hale's Point (2012) 63 copies
Bound in Moonlight (2007) 62 copies, 1 review
Wild Wind (1997) 51 copies, 1 review
Secret Thunder (1997) 49 copies
Whispers of the Flesh (2008) 36 copies, 1 review
Shelter from the Storm (2010) 29 copies, 1 review
In the Garden of Sin (2009) 25 copies, 1 review
The Black Sheep (2012) 23 copies, 1 review
Arm Candy (Hot City Nights Book 3) (2016) 22 copies, 1 review
A Burning Touch (1995) 21 copies, 2 reviews
All of Me (2000) 17 copies
A Fatal Four-Pack (2013) 17 copies
Million Dollar Baby (2000) 15 copies
In Hot Pursuit (1998) 13 copies
For the Thrill of It (1996) 11 copies
My Best Friend's Girl (2016) 9 copies
Twice the Spice (1997) 8 copies
Pure and Simple (2013) — Author — 7 copies, 1 review
Bodyguards Boxed Set (2013) 7 copies, 1 review
Bad Boy Heroes Boxed Set (2013) — Contributor — 6 copies
Summer Heat (1998) 5 copies
Wounded Heroes Boxed Set (2013) 5 copies
Windswept (2014) 5 copies
Rising Tide (2015) 2 copies
Omega 1 copy
Sündiger Mond (2011) 1 copy

Associated Works

Ten Shades of Sexy Sampler (2012) — Contributor — 85 copies, 3 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Hot Romance (2011) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
Marriage of Convenience Boxed Set (2013) — Contributor — 17 copies
Reunion Boxed Set (2013) — Contributor — 8 copies, 1 review

Tagged

1860s (16) 19th century (35) anthology (22) Boston (122) Civil War (17) ebook (142) England (19) erotica (48) fantasy (27) fiction (191) Gilded Age (55) Gilded Age Mystery (23) governess (46) historical (96) historical fiction (106) historical mystery (113) historical romance (60) Kindle (162) Massachusetts (20) medieval (44) mystery (302) Nell Sweeney (51) Nook (25) own (22) read (40) read in 2012 (17) romance (130) series (58) to-read (373) Victorian (25)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Ryan, Patricia Burford
Other names
Ryan, Patricia
Burton, Louisa
Birthdate
1954-08-09
Gender
female
Occupations
novelist
Relationships
Burford, Pamela (twin sister)
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
New York, New York, USA
Rochester, New York, USA
Disambiguation notice
Patricia Burford Ryan writes romance novels as Patricia Ryan, mystery novels as P.B. Ryan and erotica novels as Louisa Burton. She is the twin sister of Pamela Burford Loeser (Pamela Burford).
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

102 reviews
Yet another series recommended to me by a friend. I started the book thinking it would be another historical cozy (which I love), but about 3 pages in I realized that this is not an historical cozy series. Historical, yes/ Cozy, no. This is a gritty, sensual, get down-and-dirty series about a young Irish governess who lives in Boston with a very high-society family. Ostensibly she has been hired by the matron of the house to look after her little adopted child, but actually she has a show more relationship with Mrs. Hewitt that goes far beyond that. Nell Sweeney is her friend, confidante and one who Mrs. Hewitt uses to be her eyes and ears. In this book the family has just found out that their oldest son, who they thought died in a Civil War concentration is actually alive and well four years later, and he's been arrested for the murder of a lawless man outside a disreputable opium den. Nell's has kept her past life secret from her employer, but let it be said that she did not have the benefit of a genteel upbringing, and she is actually quite familiar with the seedy side of life. She can move quite freely and comfortably in the dark world of the drug dens and brothels. Nothing shocks her and she staunchly defends anyone who is dear to her. What a breath of fresh air for a heroine! What an exciting, thrilling story. I loved everything about Nell Sweeney and her life in late 19 century Boston. You bet I'll be reading other books in this series. Bring them on. show less
When I began to read Still Life with Murder, I expected to find a pleasant little story set during a period of history in which I've always been interested. Did I ever underestimate this book! Ryan's setting is wonderfully evocative and made me feel as though I were walking the streets of Boston during the Civil War. I deduced the identity of the killer early on, but that in no way spoiled this book for me-- there's simply so much to savor that this small detail quickly became show more irrelevant.

What makes this book so special are its two main characters: Nell Sweeney and opium-smoking ex-battle surgeon William Hewitt. Both have their demons, and it is clear by book's end that there are secrets yet to be revealed.

Nell's past has been one of poverty, hardship, and a fight merely to survive. She has done so through sheer force of will, her intelligence, and her understanding of the darker side of human nature. She may be a governess in the 1860's, but she's no shrinking violet, and it's fun to watch her try to keep up appearances while taking care of business. As she tries to clear Will's name, it would appear that more men than women have delicate sensibilities that she must try her best not to offend. I haven't had a character get me this fired up in a long time.

Sympathy for William Hewitt is slower to form, as it probably would be for a man willfully addicted to opium, but Ryan works her magic on him, too. Family dynamics play an important role in his behavior, as do his experiences during the war. He's determined to go to hell in a handbasket reeking of the poppy, and the author makes us want to know why.

Nell and William are two fascinating, multi-faceted characters, and I cannot wait to read the next book in this series. Sometimes-- as in the case of Still Life with Murder-- it's wonderful to have your expectations blown to smithereens!
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½
Still Life With Murder, the first book in a mystery series featuring 19th century Irish-American governess Nell Sweeney, starts off the series with a bang.

Nell, a onetime workhouse denizen on Cape Cod, has plenty of pluck and intelligence. She serves in the Boston home of Viola Hewitt, an unconventional British-born matron who elevated Nell from physician's assistant to governess for an adopted daughter. For three years, Nell had delighted in caring for Grace Lindleigh Hewitt. With two show more grown sons killed at Andersonville, the pestilential Confederate prison camp, Mrs. Hewitt sees the toddler Gracie as the light of her life, and Nell loves both of them with all her heart.

Suddenly, Mrs. Hewitt and Nell discover that one of the Hewitt sons thought dead is actually alive -- when he is arrested for the murder of a sailor in the courtyard of an opium and gambling den. Mr. Hewitt is determined to avoid a scandal at any cost -- even if the prodigal son, William Hewitt, now a hopeless opium addict, hangs. Mrs. Hewitt, crippled by polio, knows there's only one person she can trust to investigate and save her son from the gallows: Nell Sweeney.

Still Life With Murder is a real page turner with lots of plot twists, and author P.B. Ryan will keep you guessing until the last few pages. Ryan also laces the novel with a plethora of researched historical details on medicine and the class social strata of the late 1860s -- although, as Ryan so ably builds the suspense, you might not notice how much you're learning.

Within minutes of finishing Still Life With Murder, I was downloading the Kindle edition of the sequel, Murder in a Mill Town. What an auspicious beginning to a sequel! And, just to sweeten the already sweet reading experience, Kindle readers can download Still Life With Murder for free.
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I didn't initially consider myself a Mystery fan. I just didn't think I had the patience for being almost completely in the dark about the outcome of an initial problem, and then there was the way one has to find the answer to that conflict - through searching a room, a house, a hallway, by talking to characters, reading between the lines of their stories etc. With that in mind I thought mysteries were slow reads - a whole lot of problem-solving and not enough direct action, or magic. Don't show more get me wrong, I thought it was great if you were into that sort of thing, but I didn't think it was for me.

Boy, was I wrong.

I got this book because they were offering it for free on Kindle, and I thought, ok, sure, I'll power through a mystery. Power through, hah! I devoured this book in one night. The suspense was wonderful, the characters extremely well-developed, and then there was Nell and Will. Two damaged, strong protagonists who seized me by the heart and never let go. Their dialogue was enchanting, and their interaction fascinating. Coupled with this was a very well-researched setting in post-Civil War Boston, with the social machinations that came with that. Everything is so detailed and told in such a way that you really feel a part of that society.

I am officially a Mystery convert. Truth.
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Statistics

Works
44
Also by
4
Members
3,157
Popularity
#8,093
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
87
ISBNs
92
Languages
4

Charts & Graphs