"The White Lady is a triumph of storytelling. Rarely have I been swept up into a novel, into the lives of the main characters, so quickly and thoroughly. Winspear creates in Elinor White (The White Lady), 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." — Louise Penny
"The White Lady is wonderful . . . a tense and twisty character-driven thriller, a heartfelt tribute to the twentieth century's bravest women, and a perfect match between story and storyteller. No one does this better than Jacqueline Winspear." — Lee Child
“Ms. Winspear ties her story elements together in a remarkably exciting manner.” — Wall Street Journal
“After 17 Maisie novels, fans have a new character to love: Elinor White, an enigmatic war hero at the center of The White Lady , Winspear’s second stand-alone novel. White is very much her own woman, but she’s just as inspirational as Maisie. . . . . she is such an appealing character—and one I hope readers will get to know better.” — Washington Post
"Winspear’s Maisie Dobbs books have explored the intersection of criminality and war—the chaos of battle and bombs providing the perfect cover for a variety of criminal enterprises—and she expands on the subject with characteristic intelligence and psychological acuity in The White Lady ." — Air Mail
"With focus on White's interior experience and a subplot involving the post-war London crime syndicates, this book sees Winspear taking things up several notches in terms of theme and character development. However, she also turns up suspense with a structure that toggles between present, her war-torn childhood and her Special Operations Executive doings during World War II." — NPR
“A poignant story of courage, misogyny, and misused power. A tense history-based thriller filled with anguish and suspense.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Winspear is an absolute master of the character-driven thriller . . . [and] the real strength of the novel, lies in the poignant and beautifully written backstory of Elinor's childhood in war-torn Belgium and her personal losses in a devastated London.” — Booklist (starred review)
“Smart, nuanced . . . . The chapters illuminating Elinor’s dramatic backstory add vulnerability to her characterization, enriching the suspenseful main narrative. This will please both Winspear’s fans and new readers.” — Publishers Weekly
"The White Lady is a phenomenal read. You are prisoner from the opening paragraph until the suspenseful conclusion . . . .This thrilling book reveals much about mankind. Humans can be brutal, tender, kind, treacherous, cold, friendly, tremendously loyal, deceiving, brave, cowardly. Jacqueline Winspear includes all of these traits in The White Lady ." — New York Journal of Books
"The award-winning author of the Maisie Dobbs series skillfully juggles three timelines in a riveting stand-alone about a woman whose wartime experiences overshadow her post-war retirement." — Library Journal
"Jacqueline Winspear has struck gold with another indomitable heroine of wartime Britain.” — Daily Mail
"A gripping, suspenseful story full of surprises that is as captivating, finely crafted, carefully plotted, beautifully written and engaging as any of [Winspear's] previous works." — BookTrib
"The White Lady doesn’t shy away from dark subjects, and historical mystery readers searching for a bit of grit and a complex main character will admire its uncompromising storytelling." — BookPage
"If Daphne du Maurier rewrote a John le Carré manuscript, it might resemble The White Lady ." — Star Tribune
“The White Lady is a perfect fit for lovers of historical mysteries featuring intrepid, resourceful women who emerge as equal to their male colleagues and sometimes are more courageous. As a neighbor comments about Elinor, ‘She’s handy with a gun.’ And she’s very clever. This is an excellent outing for Winspear.” — New York Journal of Books
"This book spans two wars, is epic in scope, yet feels very intimate." — Mystery Scene
"Packed with action, The White Lady delivers a high-quality reading experience thanks to well-developed characters and an intriguing plot." — Novels Alive
"With her keen talent for British accents, narrator Orlagh Cassidy masterfully delivers a stand-alone from Jacqueline Winspear, which introduces powerful, brave heroine Elinor White . . . . Cassidy’s tone, pace, and pitch drive up the tension in the frightening war scenes. An engrossing experience of Winspear’s beautifully written work." — BookTrib , Best Audiobooks
"While The White Lady is filled with the horrors of two world wars, the people here are inspiring. It's both thrilling and humbling to read about the unsung heroes, ordinary villagers and even children (like Elinor and her sister) who risked their lives to do the right thing." — Book Reporter
“A war story that explores the struggle for survival, a postwar tale that examines the hardships of victory, and a manifestation of bravery, The White Lady represents absorbing fiction delivered with brio and authority.” — Freelance-Star/ Fredericksburg, VA
"Yet another extraordinary heroine from the creator of Maisie Dobbs . . . . heart-stopping." — My Edmonds News
"Winspear skillfully juggles three timelines in a compelling story of a woman whose wartime experiences overshadow her post-war retirement. She does an excellent job in bringing Elinor’s heroic actions to life, but she also excels in creating the atmosphere in post-war England. Elinor herself stands out in The White Lady . It may be a standalone, but Jacqueline Winspear has created an unforgettable character." — Lesa's Book Critiques
"In The White Lady , as in her Maisie Dobbs series, Winspear demonstrates a deep and multifaceted understanding of the effects of war on those forced to fight. Her books are thought-provoking, emotionally satisfying, and well worth your time." — New Books Network
"Jacqueline Winspear's The White Lady spans two wars. Despite the epic scope, the book has the feel of an intimate character study . . . . [Elinor] is another indelible character from Jacqueline Winspear's talented pen." — Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine
"This standalone adventure is cleverly plotted, deftly assembled with layers of narrative that take us through the first half of the twentieth century, developing the backstory of a fascinating heroine. The heist investigation, while absorbing, is almost a MacGuffin for the deeper mystery: what past tragedy made Elinor who she is, and will she be able to overcome it? Altogether, it makes for a gripping historical novel." — Reviewing the Evidence
"In this engrossing, fast paced tale, readers get to escape their own realities, meaning there’s plenty of guilty pleasure in Winspear’s latest outing." — East Bay Express
“Winspear creates another fascinating and fully realized character in Elinor White, and it will be interesting to see if we get more of Elinor in the future.” — Auburn Citizen
“The White Lady is a phenomenal read. You are prisoner from the opening paragraph until the suspenseful conclusion!” — Oh Murder!
"With the Maisie Dobbs series, Winspear has demonstrated her talents for bringing alive life in Britain and Europe during both world wars. The White Lady alternates between those two wars and life in post-war Britain . . . . Has Elinor had enough of war? Will she return? We hope so." — Woman Around Town
01/30/2023
In 1917, Elinor White, the heroine of this smart, nuanced mystery from bestseller Winspear (the Maisie Dobbs series), was working in a resistance network in German-occupied Belgium, where she, then 13, was living with her 15-year-old sister and British mother. Elinor later emigrated to England and served as a British intelligence agent. Now, in 1947, she lives quietly in Kent, staying aloof from the inhabitants of tiny Shackleford until the arrival of Jim Mackie; his wife, Rose; and their three-year-old daughter, Susie. Jim has left London and taken work as a farmhand to break away from the crime family into which he was born. His brothers are now pressuring him to help them pull off their latest criminal operation. Trauma in Elinor’s past has made her acutely sensitive to children in peril, and she can’t resist trying to protect Susie and her parents. As Elinor uses her undercover skills and former intelligence contacts to try to foil the Mackie brothers’ plans, her sleuthing has unexpected personal repercussions. The chapters illuminating Elinor’s dramatic backstory add vulnerability to her characterization, enriching the suspenseful main narrative. This will please both Winspear’s fans and new readers. Agent: Amy Rennert, Amy Rennert Agency. (Mar.)
The White Lady is a triumph of storytelling.”
#1 New York Times bestselling author Louise Penny
[A] character-driven thriller…The real strength of the novel lies in the poignant and beautifully written backstory of Elinor’s childhood in war-torn Belgium and her personal losses in a devastated London.”
Booklist (starred review)
★ 02/01/2023
Elinor DeWitt's happy childhood in Belgium vanished in 1914 with her father's disappearance. She was only 12 in 1916 when she was trained as a resistance fighter, sabotaging trains and having to kill several German soldiers to protect her sister. She tried to put the past behind her when she taught languages in England years later but was recruited to help the Allies in the next war. A traumatic experience and a head injury ended her wartime operations. Now, in 1947, Elinor White lives in a cottage provided for services to the country. She's 43, a silent figure to most in the small village. A little girl, Susie Mackie, breaks through Elinor's protective layer. Then, Jim Mackie's family comes calling. They're a powerful crime family in London, but Jim escaped from them. They want him back in the family fold, and they threaten Jim's wife and daughter, Susie. Elinor turns for help to several of her wartime acquaintances. That's when she discovers the treachery and lies she never knew about during her wartime years. VERDICT The award-winning author of the Maisie Dobbs series skillfully juggles three timelines in a riveting stand-alone about a woman whose wartime experiences overshadow her post-war retirement.—Lesa Holstine
With her keen talent for British accents, narrator Orlagh Cassidy masterfully delivers this stand-alone from Jacqueline Winspear, which introduces powerful, brave heroine Elinor White. The story moves around in time from White's current life in Britain in 1947 to her recruitment in the Belgian Resistance as an adolescent during WWI and her work as an SOE agent during WWII. Cassidy partners with Winspear to guide listeners through the emotional, physical, and long-term impacts of two wars and while doing so illuminates the unrecognized role of women. Cassidy's tone, pace, and pitch drive up the tension in the frightening war scenes. Cassidy expertly voices men, women, sulking adolescents, and young children, providing an engrossing experience of Winspear's beautifully written work. E.Q. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
With her keen talent for British accents, narrator Orlagh Cassidy masterfully delivers this stand-alone from Jacqueline Winspear, which introduces powerful, brave heroine Elinor White. The story moves around in time from White's current life in Britain in 1947 to her recruitment in the Belgian Resistance as an adolescent during WWI and her work as an SOE agent during WWII. Cassidy partners with Winspear to guide listeners through the emotional, physical, and long-term impacts of two wars and while doing so illuminates the unrecognized role of women. Cassidy's tone, pace, and pitch drive up the tension in the frightening war scenes. Cassidy expertly voices men, women, sulking adolescents, and young children, providing an engrossing experience of Winspear's beautifully written work. E.Q. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
★ 2022-12-24 A poignant story of courage, misogyny, and misused power.
In 1947, Elinor White lives in a village in Kent in a grace-and-favor house, rewarded for her service to the crown, and keeps her own counsel. A farmworkers's cottage nearby is home to the Mackie family: Jim, Rose, and little Susie, who befriends the wary Elinor. Jim comes from a family of notorious London gangsters, and when they want him to return to the fold, they'll resort to violence to convince him. In interspersed chapters we learn about the background that Elinor keeps to herself: She was a spy during both world wars. Back in 1914, in Belgium, 10-year-old Elinor, youngest daughter of a Belgian father and English mother, tries to catch a boat to England along with her mother and sister, Cecily, before the German advance, but they're too late and return to their home, now under occupation. Some time later, a mysterious woman named Isabelle approaches their mother and recruits the two girls to spy on the Germans. It's easy for schoolgirls to appear innocuous as they count the number of trains that pass by their village. The sisters are trained in sabotage and self-defense. Elinor is a natural, but Cecily is not, and when Elinor kills two German soldiers trying to rape her sister, Isabelle smuggles them out to England—where Elinor faces another war, decades later, by working with the Special Operations Executive and returning to Belgium. Now she hopes her contacts from those days will save Jim from the clutches of the Mackie family. Her wartime experiences come back to haunt her, leaving her unable to trust anyone. In the end, it’s the gangsters who tell her the truth that will shatter her world and give her hope for the future.
A tense history-based thriller filled with anguish and suspense.