Ann Purser lives in England.
Weeping on Wednesday (Lois Meade Series #3)
by Ann Purser
eBook
$7.99
-
ISBN-13:
9781101567678
- Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
- Publication date: 02/01/2005
- Series: Lois Meade Series , #3
- Sold by: Penguin Group
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 304
- Sales rank: 157,479
- File size: 736 KB
- Age Range: 18 Years
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
7.99
In Stock
It's all smiles for the series that sweeps up sales-every day of the week.
Working mum and owner of a cleaning business, Lois has just hired on the daughter of the Abrahams, an eccentric, reclusive family. But when strange letters and omens put everyone on edge, Lois wonders if the rumors about the Abrahams are the key to a terrible secret.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Terror on Tuesday (Lois Meade…
- by Ann Purser
-
- Fear on Friday (Lois Meade…
- by Ann Purser
-
- Secrets on Saturday (Lois…
- by Ann Purser
-
- Death by the Light of the Moon…
- by Joan Hess
-
- The Silence of the Flans…
- by Laura Bradford
-
- Bookman Dead Style (Dangerous…
- by Paige Shelton
-
- Murderous Mayhem at…
- by Hannah Dennison
-
- Silence of the Jams (Down…
- by Gayle Leeson
-
- Cut to the Corpse (Decoupage…
- by Lucy Lawrence
-
- French Fried
- by Kylie Logan
-
- Bad Faith: A Sister Agatha…
- by Aimée ThurloDavid Thurlo
-
- Busy Bodies (Claire Malloy…
- by Joan Hess
Recently Viewed
bn.com
The Barnes & Noble ReviewThere is nothing like a cozy, and Ann Purser does a wonderful job of bringing rural England to life in her Lois Meade mysteries -- stories that bring out the charm (and annoyances) of village life in a captivatingly timeless way. As owner of New Brooms ("We sweep cleaner"), Lois Meade is privy to many a secret in Long Farnden, where she and her team of cleaners are in and out of people's houses and lives on a weekly basis. But the remote farmhouse of Cathanger Mill and its inhabitants are unknown to her, until Enid Abraham applies for a job with New Broom.
There's something strange about Enid. She mentions her reclusive mother and frail father but omits any mention of her elusive brother Edward, whom Lois soon learns is in some financial trouble and running from the police. Driving home one night, Lois thinks she sees a body by Cathanger Mill, yet the police can find nothing. Then a sullen au pair hysterically announces she saw a man kill the family pet; yet the carcass can't be found. And when Enid disappears, Lois can't believe that the woman simply walked away from her new job and her needy parents. Somewhere, lost among the bits and pieces of her life that Enid scattered so sparingly, must be some clues to what really happened. And Lois is determined to sweep away the cobwebs and apply enough elbow grease to set the truth shining clear. Sue Stone