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The Greenleaf Murders

A Historic Homes Mystery

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The Greenleaf Murders

By: R. J. Koreto
Narrated by: Emily Sutton-Smith
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About this listen

Young architect Wren Fontaine lands her dream job: restoring Greenleaf House, New York’s finest Gilded-Age mansion, to its glory days. But old homes have old secrets: Stephen Greenleaf—heir to what’s left of his family’s legacy—refuses to reveal what his plans are once the renovation is completed. And still living in a corner of the home is Stephen’s ninety-year-old Aunt Agnes who’s lost in the past, brooding over a long-forgotten scandal while watching Wren with mistrust.

Wren’s job becomes more complex when a shady developer who was trying to acquire Greenleaf House is found murdered. And after breaking into a sealed attic, Wren finds a skeleton stuffed in a trunk. She soon realizes the two deaths, a century apart, are strangely related. Meanwhile, a distraction of a different kind appears in the form of her client’s niece, the beautiful and seductive Hadley Vanderwerf. As Wren gingerly approaches a romance, she finds that Hadley has her own secrets.

Then a third murder occurs, and the introverted architect is forced to think about people, and about how ill-fated love affairs and obsessions continue to haunt the Greenleafs. In the end, Wren risks her own life to uncover a pair of murderers, separated by a century but connected by motive. She reveals an odd twist in the family tree that forever changes the lives of the Greenleafs, the people who served them, the mansion they all called home—and even Wren herself.

©2022 R. J. Koreto (P)2023 Blackstone Publishing
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Good opener to the series

Everything about the concept of this book is right up my street!
Who doesn’t love a murder mystery with parallels in the past and present.
I would say that the narrator did seem rather staid and formal to begin with, but perhaps this was reflecting Wren’s persona? As the story progressed however it became far less noticeable, and the narrator did an overall good job.
This book was also laying the groundwork (hopefully) for more in the series and it will be interesting to see how the main characters develop.
Another very minor criticism would be that for a book focused on architecture and design, I felt there was not enough description of the buildings and of the physical appearance of the characters. This could just be a personal preference however as I like to visualise the stories as I listen and it would have been good to have a few more pointers!
Overall a good listen and would definitely read more on the series!

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