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Book Reviews of Thunder on the Right

Thunder on the Right
Author: Mary Stewart
ISBN: 58128
Pages: 192
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Thunder on the Right on
Artist Jennifer Silver has come to the picturesque, secluded Valley of the Storms in the French Pyrenees to meet with a young cousin who is about to enter the convent there--only to discover that the young woman has died in a dreadful car accident. Or did she?

Lies abound in this strange and frightening place, but seeking the truth could lead Jennifer to her own violent death.

"Nobody does it better."
-Elizabeth Lowell

"Un-put-downable... no one writes the damsel-in-distress tale with greater charm or urgency."
-New York Times Book Review

"Perils await every turning page."
-Washington Post
kskrista avatar reviewed Thunder on the Right on + 162 more book reviews
Amazing story, very compelling! A young woman travels to the French Pyrenees in search of her cousin only to learn that this cousin has died in a terrible vehicle accident. While she believes this news, she just can't leave and stays in the convent where her cousin had been treated only to feel that something is definitely not right. What is going on in this place?
reviewed Thunder on the Right on + 9 more book reviews
I love all of Mary Stewart's suspense novels!
reviewed Thunder on the Right on + 3389 more book reviews
A highly charged romantic thriller" - New York Herald Tribune
The sheltered Oxford-raised, quiet and reserved young Jennifer Silver journeys to the High Pyrenees in search of her half-French cousin who has been recuperating in a convent. A WWII-wounded former student of her professor father and brilliant musician follows her there for his own personal reasons. Just as they are rejoined, they become caught up in intricate webs of danger and criminal intrigue.

From the back cover- "She had come to the convent - a brooding cluster of ancient buildings nestled deep in the wild upper reaches of the French Pyrenees - to find her young cousin, Gillian. But the Convent of Our Lady of the Storms was not like others. There was something strange and frightening about the place...something that gave off an aura of evil, of hidden, violent things...
They told her Gillian was dead, but she did not believe them. Searching for the truth meant trouble. She did not know, until too late, it also meant ...murder."

As always, Mary Stewart's settings are so spectacular and described in such detail that I can see, smell and touch as clearly as if I were there as well. It is because of this superb sense of detail that a half dozen reads may not even be enough.