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A Lesson in Secrets: A Maisie Dobbs Novel
 
 

A Lesson in Secrets: A Maisie Dobbs Novel [Kindle Edition]

Jacqueline Winspear
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)

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Amazon Exclusive: Lee Child Interviews Jacqueline Winspear

Jacqueline Winspear, like her interviewer, the iconic, bestselling author Lee Child, originally hails from the United Kingdom. A Lesson in Secrets is her eighth novel featuring psychologist-investigator and former WW1 nurse, Maisie Dobbs. Here she talks with Child about her work on the series, and her enduring interest in the aftermath of WW1.

Lee Child: People are often surprised that I'm a huge Maisie Dobbs fan, because Jack Reacher is all about a kind of Spartan American masculinity, and Maisie Dobbs is all about a kind of feminine English refinement. But they're both strong, unconventional people. Perhaps that's the cross-genre appeal? Do you find that Maisie attracts an unusual mix of readers?

Jacqueline Winspear: I’m thrilled you’re such a Maisie Dobbs fan--and you can count me among those millions of Jack Reacher fans. Maisie and Reacher are both unconventional, but I believe another factor in their cross-genre appeal is that both have endured life-changing challenges. Maisie attracts diverse readers: men and women, all age groups, veterans, nurses, college students, people who have faced troubles, and people interested in the era.

LC: And in fact your novels are driven by violence far worse than mine--off the page, granted, but there’s no getting around the fact that at the heart of your books is the aftermath of a horrendous war, with its attendant violence and death. How do you see the role of violence in your novels?

JW: I think you hit the theme there with “aftermath.” The violence in my books is that searing, painful residue left by the passing of a terrible time, when people were also crushed emotionally by the deep losses over a four-year period. In addition, there’s that element of violence that lingers--in Among the Mad, for example--when war’s tentacles will not let go. We see that again today in the stories of veterans who are still fighting their wars, but the conflict is raging inside them.

LC: As a kid in England I remember seeing hundreds of maimed old men, and hundreds of lonely old women. My grandfather was an example of the first, and two great-aunts examples of the second - sad reminders of a terrible time. Was it something similar that drew you to the First World War and the “Between the Wars” era that followed?

JW: I have the same memories--my grandfather was wounded at the Battle of the Somme, and my grandmother was partially blinded at the Woolwich Arsenal, in an explosion that wounded her sister and killed several girls working alongside her. There were the elderly spinsters in my neighborhood, and for each there was that old sepia photograph on the mantelpiece, of a sweetheart or brother lost to war. Those childhood memories led me to think a lot about what happens after war is done. As a character says in Birds of a Feather, “That’s the trouble with war; it lives on inside the living.”

LC: I was introduced to Maisie Dobbs by my wife, who passed through an airport and picked up the first in the series. She loved it, and urged me to read it, and I'm glad I did. It's one of the very, very few series we both love equally--in fact, perhaps the only one. Is this typical of your readers?

JW: I receive so many emails from fans who tell me that the books are read by all members of the family. And many women tell me that it was their husband who first discovered Maisie. The books are as accessible to readers aged about fourteen as they are to seniors. There are few things today that all age groups within a family can engage in, discuss and get excited about, so it’s lovely when I hear that family members are awaiting the next book so they can all read it.

LC: Maisie is definitively feminine, but she's running a business, and poking around in a "man's world," which is true to the times, and indicative of the early stages of feminism in the West. Was that something you wanted to explore?

JW: It would have been difficult to introduce a character such as Maisie and not explore the fact that the Great War left so many women to forge a life alone. If there was one thing I wanted to do, it was to bring the spirit of that generation to the character of Maisie Dobbs. Of course, some women floundered and lived lonely lives, but there were a great many who blazed a trail. I believe an archetype was born at that time--the stoic British woman who is independent and more than a little opinionated, with a heart of gold under a tough exterior, and who knows what it is to endure. Dame Maggie Smith has played that character in several films.

LC: Maisie understands human psychology in a way that seems to be an early and experimental pre-echo of what we'd now call criminal profiling. It's a huge part of both her process and her appeal. Where did that come from?

JW: That developed in a very organic way. Having established her as a “sensitive,” I wanted to give her real expertise--and there are historical underpinnings to this aspect of her character. Maisie studied the Moral Sciences curriculum at Girton College when psychology was in its infancy. I have the prospectus from 1913, and about one third of the course was the study of modern psychology. It was a time of great experimentation, so Maisie’s processes have their roots in real practices considered innovative at the time.

LC: One of your decisions I admire is the way you have moved the series forward in time so firmly. Most writers would have continued mining the same immediate post-war seam forever. What was your thinking behind that? And how do you keep the character fresh as the series itself develops?

JW: I once heard you say at a conference, “The reader comes back to a series, not to find out what the sleuth does with the case, but what the case does to the sleuth.” I agree. We are all impacted not only by our past, but by our current circumstances and those around us. You always put Reacher in a new area, be it small town or big city; and through his wandering we learn a lot about him. I work with the geography of time. Not everyone likes change and many readers would like Maisie Dobbs to stay as she is in a given book. But life’s not like that--the goalposts tend to move when we are at our most comfortable, and I want to keep the series fresh.

LC: I’m often asked if I have a favorite book within my series, so now I’m turning the tables: Do you have favorites among your novels?

JW: That’s such a difficult question, because each book not only represents a different place on my journey as a writer, but has been inspired by something that touched me. I think Maisie Dobbs will always be very tightly held in my affections, because it was my first book and was written at a difficult time in my life, when I was recovering from a horrible accident. The other choice would be The Mapping of Love and Death, because it was inspired by the true story of a soldier whose remains lay under Belgian soil for some 90 years until unearthed by a farmer. I learned more about him when I became involved in the quest to discover his origins. When I look at that book, I think of a young man lost to war who was never identified and who was eventually laid to rest as “A Soldier of The Great War, Known Unto God.” I ache for the parents who never knew where their son died, for he had probably been listed as “Missing, Presumed Dead.”

From Publishers Weekly

In Winspear's solid eighth Maisie Dobbs novel (after The Mapping of Love and Death), Maisie finds herself financially independent, thanks to a bequest from her late mentor, Dr. Maurice Blanche, and open to new challenges exactly at the moment the British Secret Service seeks to recruit her in 1932. Greville Liddicote, the author of a pacifist children's book that the government went to great pains to suppress during WWI, has founded a college in Cambridge devoted to maintaining peace in Europe. To keep tabs on Liddicote, Maisie infiltrates his school under the guise of a philosophy teacher. When a staff member is murdered, she reverts to her old profession and works to aid the police inquiry from the inside. Maisie's new affluence allows her to intervene benevolently in the lives of those she cares for and her romantic life intensifies, but these positive personal developments end up making her less interesting as a protagonist than formerly. 9-city author tour. (Apr.)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 718 KB
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (March 22, 2011)
  • Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004FEF6QK
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,248 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

85 Reviews
5 star:
 (39)
4 star:
 (26)
3 star:
 (12)
2 star:
 (8)
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (85 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

116 of 120 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Perceived Calm Between the Storms, February 1, 2011
By 
L. M Young (Marietta, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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In the previous novel, changes in Maisie Dobbs' personal life have set her on a new course in her investigations. In the newest book, a bridge is beginning to form between repercussions of the Great War and the yet unknown second World War, while Maisie is asked by the British secret service to take a position as philosophy teacher at a new university in Cambridge which preaches a philosophy of peace, to investigate whether any activies taking place there are subversive to the Crown. The head of the university is a man who wrote a children's book about the war so filled with pacifist leanings that it was banned by the government and was rumored to have caused a mutiny at the front lines. Maisie is not there long before the man is murdered. While Scotland Yard investigates, Maisie continues her own inquiries, and, a bit too priescently, I thought, warns the Secret Service about certain of her students with Nazi leanings and the party itself (which, of course, the Government-types ignore). There is much more for Maisie to learn about the man's life and the secretary who disappears following the death, about the German professor that steps into his place and the wealthy man who funds the school.

In the meantime, Billy Beale works on the case brought to them by Sandra, a young woman whose husband died due to an accident at work. As the story progresses, both Maisie and Billy suspect the accident wasn't one at all. Maisie's old friend Priscilla and her family are drawn into this portion of the story.

Maisie's relationship with her new love progresses slowly in this outing, but those who read the Dobbs books know it's in Maisie's nature to take things methodically. Her dad is also making some changes in his life. Readers who like the earlier stories of Maisie dealing with repercussions of the First World War may dislike signs of the next appearing, but Winspear is not allowing Maisie to remain static in a postwar world. Several of the cards are played early in the mystery, but all-in-all I found the story and characters appealing.
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48 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Worthy Addition to the Series, February 7, 2011
By 
Carol Roberts (Montgomery, AL United States) - See all my reviews
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To me, one of the attractive aspects of Jacqueline Winspears' Maisie Dobbs series is that it is set in the period between the World Wars. In Britain particularly, the loss of a generation of young men is sorely felt as well as the unemployment among the veterans, many of whom were maimed in the trench warfare.

In this, the seventh book in the series, Maisie temporarily leaves her assistant, Billy Beale in charge of her private detective agency to assist the Special Branch in their observation of a peace movement. While the Special Branch is concentrating on Communism, Maisie is concerned with the enthusiasm of the group for the new National Socialist movement in Germany and their leader, Adolph Hitler. Maisie is virtually undercover, teaching at a new college that brings together students from many countries to pursue peace.

This is a worthy addition to the series and shows other aspects of Maisie's life-a growing love affair, the inheritance from her mentor, her concern for Billy and his family still grieving the loss of a child. And there is a murder to be solved.

This book, as the others, brings alive this period and helps show the steps toward a new conflict that seems only dimly in the future. I think this is a worthy series and one I highly recommend for both entertainment and understanding of a most interesting time.
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46 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cinderella on the Backs: social mobility run amok, January 31, 2011
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A series is usually defined by the things that the novels have in common. What's most striking about this series, however, is the element of change -- change in Maisie Dobbs herself, change as other characters die, in Maisie's sense of herself as a professional, the changes in the social and economic laws of gravity in English society, all of these make for an intensely interesting set of books.

And unlike the Charles Todd series with the depressed/dpressing Ian Rutledge, the Maisie Dobbs books give us a character who is forever scarred by the Great War, yes, but who is also capable of moving on.

That said, I have some problems with the direction this move is taking.

Maybe _the_ most fascinating element of these novels has been the tension generated by the English class system. Maisie, who started life as a housemaid, has been extensively sponsored by her employers -- educated, privately at first, then at Cambridge, she is able to start a detective business, to continue her friendship with an upper-class college chum, and to fend off a variety of marriage proposals.

In this novel, however, Maisie seems to be edging into the middle class. Winspeare is British, but she lives in the States now, and I'm wondering if she hasn't caught a bad case of social mobility. Why can Maisie not continue to be an admirable, smart, accomplished working class woman? Why?

Maisie, now a woman of means, has removed herself entirely from any day-to-day problems with money and access, and is beginning to devote herself to philanthropy. If this were linked more to a sense of her own humble beginnings, I'd not object. But when she thinks of herself as as one of a generation of women who inspire the next gen. to seek education and jobs, she fails to mention how fairy-tale fortunate she herself has been. Taking Maisie back to Cambridge as a lecturer is risky on several levels. Even with the strange little made-up college, there's an alarming number of pitfalls here.

This doesn't detract from the 5-star rating, but it does give me pause and makes me concerned about the direction Winspeare is choosing for the series. Maisie seems to have undergone a sea change between this novel and The Mapping of Love and Death. The change is so marked that I looked online to see if I had missed a book.

Change is good, but I'd like to watch it happen.
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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: A man can stand anything, except a succession of ordinary days. &quote;
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anything to save the upper classes through disenfranchisement of the common man while allowing the common man to think youre on his side. &quote;
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