The White Lady: A British Historical Mystery
The White Lady introduces yet another extraordinary heroine from Jacqueline Winspear, creator of the bestselling Maisie Dobbs seriesāformer wartime operative Elinor White, a veteran of two wars and a trained killer who is drawn back into the world of menace she has been desperate to leave behind.
āA triumph. . . . Winspear creates in Elinor White (the āWhite Ladyā), a complex, endearing, achingly flawed hero. This is both fast-paced and thoughtful, bold and nuanced, a thriller that is thrillingly human. I loved it.āāLouise Penny
England, 1947. Private, quiet āMiss White,ā as Elinor is known, lives in a village in rural Kent, and to her fellow villagers is something of an enigmaāwell she might be, as Elinor occupies a āgrace and favorā property, a rare privilege offered to faithful servants of the Crown for services to the nation. But the residents of Shacklehurst have no way of knowing how dangerous Elinorās war work had been, or that their mysterious neighbor is haunted by her past.
It will take Susie, the child of a young farmworker named Jim Mackie, and his wife, Rose, to break through Miss Whiteās icy demeanorābut Jim has something in common with Elinor. He, too, is desperate to escape his past. When the powerful Mackie crime family demands a return of their prodigal son for an important job, Elinor assumes the task of protecting her neighbors, especially the bright-eyed Susie. In her quest to uncover the truth behind the familyās pursuit of Jim, Elinor unwittingly sets out on a treacherous pathāyet it is one that leads to her own freedom.