![]() Read last week’s review of The Immortalists. I really loved this book and highly recommend The Huntress by Kate Quinn.įive Stars for The Huntress. In the end the reality is all of them are The Huntress. Quinn’s attention to research and detail is apparent in the mix of fact and fiction from descriptive landscape passages to intense emotional drama of the characters’ past and present. ![]() This book is tightly written, with a believable plot that develops a different side of oft overdone WWII story. She attended Boston University, where she earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in classical voice. Kate Quinn is a native of Southern California. Jordan McBride, Boston teenager and aspiring photographer, Jordan wants to forget the war, move forward and live a life of her choosing.Īnneliese McBride, Jordan’s new step-mother, appears friendly and engaged in her new American life, but something underlies the perfect facade she allows. In this immersive, heart-wrenching story, Kate Quinn illuminates the consequences of war on individual lives, and the price we pay to seek justice and truth. Ian Graham, British War Correspondent unable to let go of his own personal search for one particular war criminal, a woman known as The Huntress. Witness to unthinkable atrocities and dealing with her own pain and loss, with deep and disturbing memories of hate and revenge. Nina Markova, raised in Siberia, turned Russian fighter pilot known as the Night Witches. ![]() Quinn introduces an intriguing cast of characters in The Huntress – a post World War Two novel built around the search for Nazi war criminals. Here is my book Review of The Huntress by Kate Quinn. So I decided to tackle her new book The Huntress. ![]() A couple of months ago I read Kate Quinn’s The Alice Network and I really enjoyed it. ![]()
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