Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in 1815, McElwain's uneven third Kendra Donovan mystery (after 2017's A Twist in Time) takes the Duke of Aldridge and unwilling time traveler and FBI profiler Kendra Donovan, who poses as his American ward, to Yorkshire. En route to the duke's estate, fog forces them to stop in the small town of East Dingleford, where they learn that Harry Stone, the debauched and sadistic manager of a nearby textile mill, has been murdered. Though the constable assumes Stone was killed by the Luddites who have just vandalized the factory, Kendra's forensic expertise suggests otherwise. Stone has myriad enemies, and the brutal murder of his wife further widens the field of suspects. Kendra bucks resistance to her gender as she interviews villagers, from the mill's titled owner to a woman Stone harassed. Contemptuous of Regency mores and boorish by any era's standards, Kendra remains the series' weak point. Happily, the closing scenes hint at the emergence of a less heavy-handed portrayal. Series fans will look forward to the next installment. Agent: Jill Grosjean, Jill Grosjean Literary Agency. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
An FBI agent struggles to adjust when she accidentally time travels back to the Regency period in England.Kendra Donovan fell back in time during an operation at Aldridge Castle, and when she wound up 200 years before she started out, she became the ward of the Duke of Aldridge, who knows her secret and is fascinated by her knowledge of the unimaginable future. Kendra proved her worth by saving the hide of the duke's nephew, Alec, Lord Sutcliffe, who was accused of murdering his former mistress (A Twist in Time, 2017). When her repeated attempts to return home fail, she and the duke travel to one of his smaller estates in Lancashire, where he hopes she'll become more adept in adjusting to the mores of 1815. Caught in a fog, they pass a group of Luddites just before bedding down at an inn. The magistrate and constable to whom the duke reports the group's presence plan to inspect the nearby cotton mill when they get news that the equipment has been damaged and the mill manager, Mr. Stone, murdered. Constable Jameson is ready to blame the Luddites until Kendra points out new evidence. The duke sends for Alec, who's become Kendra's lover, while Kendra interviews Mr. Biddle, the mill's assistant manager, and its owner, Lord Nathan Bancroft, the Earl of Langfrey, a man with a mysterious past. Stone, a poor manager with a bad reputation, was much disliked. When Stone's wife is tortured and murdered, Kendra wonders what the killer is so desperate to recover. Frustrated by her powerlessness as a woman, she must rely on the duke for entree despite her superior investigative skills. Even so, she solves the crimes while ruffling feathers along the way.McElwain's cross between a Regency romance and a time-travel fantasy combines a mediocre mystery with an expos of many of the inequities of the era. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
It's 1815, and FBI agent Kendra Donovan is still stuck in the past. (An incident in the twenty-first century sent her plummeting back through time.) While she tries to figure out some way to get back to her own time and place, now she's living in England, ward of the Duke of Aldridge, secret lover of the duke's nephew Alec. And because an FBI agent doesn't stop solving crimes just because she's hurled 200 years into the past, when a man is murdered in a village in Yorkshire, Kendra brings all her skills to bear to find the killer and, as it turns out, to learn something shocking about her own predicament. Although the bare-bones premise is similar to that of Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series (modern-day woman is transported to the past), the execution is quite different; where Gabaldon's novel is designed as a fantasy, McElwain's is a solidly constructed crime novel with a little time travel. And it sure is fun to watch Kendra use modern-day forensic and investigative techniques in a time when crime solving was a rudimentary science.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist