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A Ruse of Shadows
A Ruse of Shadows | Sherry Thomas
4 posts | 4 read | 1 reading | 3 to read
Charlotte Holmes is accustomed to solving crimes, not being accused of them, but she finds herself in a dreadfully precarious position as the bestselling Lady Sherlock series continues. Charlottes success on the RMS Provence has afforded her a certain measure of time and assurance. Taking advantage of that, she has been busy, plotting to prise the man her sister loves from Moriartys iron grip. Disruption, however, comes from an unexpected quarter. Lord Bancroft Ashburton, disgraced and imprisoned as a result of Charlottes prior investigations, nevertheless manages to press Charlotte into service: Underwood, his most loyal henchman, is missing and Lord Bancroft wants Charlotte to find Underwood, dead or alive. But then Lord Bancroft himself turns up dead and Charlotte, more than anyone else, meets the trifecta criteria of motive, means, and opportunity. Never mind rescuing anyone else, with the law breathing down her neck, can Charlotte save herself from prosecution for murder?
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review
iread2much
A Ruse of Shadows | Sherry Thomas
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Pickpick

Another excellent book but I will be so mad if this is truly the last book in the series. This book doesn‘t finish all the plots and I really want that!
Charolette will pull together a lot of diverse threads to bring about the reunion of people that are loved by her clients, friends, and family and to avoid going to prison for murder.
4/5 I need to reread the series in order for this book and I really really don‘t want the series to end this way

AnnCrystal 🤩👍⛵. 3mo
Deblovestoread I‘m waiting for my hold to come in. Wasn‘t aware it is meant to be the last in the series? 3mo
iread2much @AnnCrystal 😊💜 3mo
iread2much @Deblovestoread that‘s what I read online, but I really hope it‘s not true 3mo
25 likes4 comments
review
DebinHawaii
A Ruse of Shadows | Sherry Thomas
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Pickpick

#ReadAway2024 #SeriesLove2024

Finished earlier in the week but didn‘t get a chance to post. This is Book 8 in the Lady Sherlock series which I discovered with #PemberLittens & promptly binged so I‘d be ready for its release. I enjoy this series even though Charlotte is so smart & so good at what she does, I always feel like I‘m racing to catch up with her & this one is no exception. I continue to love her & Ash & look forward to the next one!

TheSpineView Great job!🤩 3mo
kspenmoll I need to catch up on this series! Nice review! 3mo
DieAReader 🥳Fantastic!! 3mo
60 likes2 stack adds3 comments
blurb
DebinHawaii
A Ruse of Shadows | Sherry Thomas
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5 AM at the airport—the morning she comes early! 🥱 Headed to Hilo for the day. Breakfast & a few chapters of the tagged book on the plane ride over & back.

Allbymyshelf Safe travels! 4mo
59 likes1 comment
review
julesG
A Ruse of Shadows | Sherry Thomas
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Pickpick

No 8 in the Lady Sherlock Series

#SeriesLove2024 @TheSpineView @Andrew65

Enjoyed spending time with Charlotte, Mrs Watson, Ash,..

One teeny tiny pet peeve: the characters are British/European, they'd use the Celsius temperature scale. Mrs Watson remarking on the London day with "temperatures in the sixties" took me out of the narrative for a long moment.

Sace When does the book take place? I think the UK started using metric a little late? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrication_in_the_United_Kingdom (I did a lazy google search) 5mo
TheSpineView Great job! 5mo
julesG @Sace starts in August 1887 5mo
See All 9 Comments
julesG @Sace okay, I've checked the archive of the London Evening Standard and the weather forecast used Fahrenheit. It still feels weird, especially since records are in Celsius. 5mo
Sace @julesG I can see how it‘s weird. Being in the US I wouldn‘t have even noticed. The only reason I googled is because growing up I had always heard our measurements referred to as “British” (and sometimes “Imperial”) so I figured they were probably a little unwilling to give up their own measurement system 😂 5mo
humouress UK changed to SI units in the 60s/ 70s. Not that I was around but I do remember some practice questions being in pounds, shillings and pence which were pre-decimalisation units. If only we had 12 fingers; base 12 is easier to do sums with. It's all them Romans' fault. 5mo
julesG @humouress I knew that weights and measurements and money changed to SI system. I just, somehow, assumed the UK had used the Celsius scale from its inception. I'm basing that assumption on my having studied temperature charts from the 1600s onwards that used Celsius. Yes, I know the Centigrade scale wasn't around that early and those average temperatures are based on guesstimations based on weather observations. I've learned something new today. 5mo
julesG I'm actually mainly embarrassed that I made this assumption in the first place. I could have had a look at newspaper archives and checked. 🙄🙄🙄 Rolling my eyes at mys3 5mo
julesG ... myself. 5mo
54 likes9 comments