The Painted Castle (Kristy Cambron) – Review

Posted 17 October 2019 by Katie in Christian Fiction, Review, Romance, Time-slip / 1 Comment


Title: 
The Painted Castle
Author: 
Kristy Cambron
Genre: 
Time-slip
Series: 
#3 Lost Castle series
Publisher: 
Thomas Nelson
Release date: 
15 October 2019
Pages:  
400

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Thomas Nelson

The Painted Castle (Lost Castle #3)


About the Book

A lost painting of Queen Victoria.

A library bricked off from the world.

And three women, separated by time, whose lives are irrevocably changed.

When art historian Keira Foley is hired to authenticate a painting at a centuries-old East Suffolk manor, she hopes this is just the thing to get her career and life back on track. But from the time she arrives at Parham Hill Estate and begins working alongside rumored art thief Emory Scott, she’s left with far more questions than answers. Could this lost painting of Queen Victoria be a duplicate of the original Winterhalter masterpiece, and if so, who is the artist?

As Keira begins to unravel the mystery behind the portrait, two women emerge from the estate’s forgotten past. In Victorian England, talented sketch artist Elizabeth Meade is engaged to Viscount Huxley, then owner of Parham Hill. However, Elizabeth’s real motive for being at Parham Hill has nothing to do with art or marriage. She’s determined to avenge her father’s brutal murder—even if it means a betrothal to the very man she believes committed the crime.

A century later, Amelia Woods—a World War II widow who has turned Parham Hill and its beloved library into a boarding school for refugee children—receives military orders to house a troop of American pilots. She is determined the children in her care will remain untouched by the war, but the task is proving difficult with officers taking up every square inch of their world . . . and one in particular vying for a space in Amelia’s long-shut up heart.

Set in three time periods—the rapid change of Victorian England, the peak of England’s home-front tensions at the end of WWII, and modern day—The Painted Castle unfolds a story of heartache and hope and unlocks secrets lost for generations just waiting to be found.

Excerpt

Patience tested, Keira stared him down. “I told you on the first night, Mr. Scott, and that’s flat. My answer is no. I’m not accepting employment offers just now.”
    “I’m not the type to give up easily.”
    “Neither am I. So hadn’t you better find another prospective employee who won’t toss your card in the rubbish bin?”
    Emory slid a business card across the table with an index finger, like it had been itching to jump out of his hand. “Lucky I had a few extra printed, just in case.”
    The sleek blue-gray and black embossed card reflected a rectangle of polish to contrast the rustic wood table, but Keira made no move to reach for it.
    “Look, I’m not trying to bother you, Miss Foley. But considering your job ended in New York and you’ve found yourself back under the thumb—forgive me, but an overbearing lot—of egocentric male family members, I would think you may be open to employment offers. At least one with better working conditions.”
    Caution warned Keira to retreat a step.
    This Scott Enterprises chap knew more than could be attained through a simple social media search. No one outside of her family knew she’d just come home after things fell apart in New York, and few in Dublin knew the family history well enough to inquire about why she’d returned home to Ireland after a years-long hiatus from the family’s cozy Irish holidays. If he was wise to all that, then he’d done some digging. And just how deep did the shovel descend?
    No more games.
    “You have about five seconds left before my brother endeavors to escort you out the front door by the seat of your trousers, Mr. Scott. Cormac’s a steady chap, but even he has his limits, and you’re testing them.”
    Emory tapped an index finger to the reclaimed-wood tabletop, calculating something. “Fine. Answer me this and I’ll go—are you the same Keira Foley, doctoral candidate writing a dissertation on the link between painter Franz Xaver Winterhalter and a supposed lost portrait of Queen Victoria?”
    Keira’s throat tightened. That was one chapter she’d hoped was buried for good. Whatever this Mr. Scott was aiming for, she didn’t like that it involved unearthing things she’d have preferred remained underground. “Your point?”
    “I’m in the art business.” He paused and tilted his head to the side. “So was it you?”
    “It got me fired. But yeah. That was me.”
    His brow twitched. “How could a dissertation get you fired?”
    Keira buttoned her lip. Not going there. That story was a closed book on a high shelf, and she wasn’t pulling it down for the likes of him.

Taken from The Painted Castle by Kristy Cambron
Copyright © 2019 by Kristy Cambron
Used by permission of http://www.thomasnelson.com/

Review

What an enthralling read! I feel as though I got the best of THREE worlds with this story—contemporary, WWII, and Victorian. Each setting had its own tone, largely thanks to the different dynamics between the main characters, but the story was bound together as a whole by Cambron’s beautifully weighted prose, rich characterisation, and the gradually unfolding mystery of the painting of Queen Victoria.

Each of the three settings held my attention equally. I loved the slightly Gothic feel to the Victorian setting as Lady Elizabeth Meade prepares to marry a man her mother has chosen for her—a man who has a sinister connection to Elizabeth’s past. Then there was the fiery beginning to Keira and Emory’s acquaintance, which mellowed into something altogether different, even as suspicions over Emory’s past cast a shadow over their efforts to discover the story behind the painting. And finally, the poignancy of Amelia and Wyatt’s story, set against the backdrop of WWII. So much delicious and varied emotional tension!

It could even be argued there’s a kind of literary chiaroscuro effect in the contrasts of this novel. Cambron’s love of art, her attention to visual detail, and her ability to capture beauty in so many different forms are light against the shadowed mystery of the painted castle, her hidden treasures, and the characters’ pasts. And there are castles! Don’t forget the castles, people!

It all adds up to a wonderfully satisfying read.

I received a copy of this novel from the author. This has not influenced the content of my review, which is my honest and unbiased opinion.

More From Kristy

About The Painted Castle

A war-torn estate holding its secrets close. A lost library bricked off from the world. And a portrait-maker’s unknown masterpiece of a Queen named Victoria… What stories do they long to tell?

It was supposed to be a one-week snatch-and-grab: survey an art find, collect a hefty fee, and use that to settle historian Kiera Foley’s life back into balance. But from the moment she sets foot in the East Suffolk countryside, the mystery of an old English manor, a crumbling beekeeper’s cottage, and a library that had long ago been sealed off brick by brick, all stir more questions than answers. What begins as a novice assignment instead peels back layers, lulling Keira into the depths of the estate’s long-forgotten history.

Despite questions swirling around the enigmatic, rumored art thief who’s employed her, Keira finds the existence of a portrait captivating enough to upend all of her expectations. This one could be a twin—a painting so close in composition to a known masterpiece, it may be rendered priceless if it truly captured the likeness of a young Queen named Victoria…

1842— In order to salvage what’s left of her family’s shaky circumstances, artist Elizabeth Meade knows her duty must be to marry well. But she hopes looks can be deceiving enough to hide her true motives behind a congenial smile and gain entry into the ballrooms of England’s noble elite. Instead of husband-hunting, Elizabeth searches for the one thing that’s seared to her memory—the eyes of her father’s killer, whom she unwittingly sketched one snowy night in Piccadilly ten years before. She never expects to find answers tucked away in the countryside at Parham Hill, in the form of a portrait-maker who could help her artist dreams come true, if only she could forget the highwayman she’s hunted for the last decade—the estate-owner who unwittingly selects her as his betrothed…

1942—When the 390th Bomb Group arrives at Amelia Woods’ Parham Hill Estate, the American flyboys bring playing cards, B-17 “flying fortresses”, and enough bravado to believe they can triumph over Hitler just by staring him down. Amelia isn’t certain, and she’s unwilling to compromise the safety and security in a carefully-crafted world she’s built for the dozens of London-evacuated children left in her charge. But with Anderson shelters buried in the gardens and an Allied airfield a stone’s throw away, Amelia may have no choice but to wait out the war under blackouts and bombs, and accept help from the captain who offers it—even if it means risking all she has left of her late husband’s memory…

From the streets of Piccadilly and the lavish halls of Buckingham Palace to the countryside surrounding Framlingham Castle, a warn-torn estate, a hidden library, and the lost portrait of a queen come together to write the final chapter in the Lost Castle series. Set in three time periods—the rapid change of Victorian England, the tumultuous skies over England’s eastern shores in WWII, and modern day—The Painted Castle unfolds a legacy of faith and the family we fight for, of risk and reward, and the artful crafting of a story that can be generations in the making… yet still change everything about a single life.

Previous Books in the Series

About the Author

kristy-cambron

Kristy Cambron is an award-winning author of Christian fiction, including her bestselling debut The Butterfly and the Violin, and an author of Bible studies, including the Verse Mapping Series. She is a passionate storyteller who travels to speak at ministry events across the country, encouraging women to experience a deeper life in the Word through verse mapping. Her work has been named to Publishers Weekly Religion & Spirituality TOP 10, Library Journal’s Best Books, RT Reviewers’ Choice Awards, and received 2015 & 2017 INSPY Award nominations.

Kristy holds a degree in Art History/Research Writing, and lives in Indiana with her husband and three sons, and can probably be bribed with a coconut mocha latte and a good read.

Connect with Kristy:  Website  |  Facebook  |  Twitter  |  Pinterest  |  Instagram

One response to “The Painted Castle (Kristy Cambron) – Review

  1. Wow! These covers are stunning, and the premise is intriguing. And since I have Irish/Scot roots, of course that appeals! As a writer, I have no idea how to craft these stories set in different time periods, but they fascinate me. I think I’ve found a new author to read!

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