Just read a couple of
Amazon reviews of it, seems they didn't think much of it either. The first one gave me a few chuckles

I don't think I'll check it out, they make it sound pointless and quite grim.
I quite enjoyed
Rebecca so when happened across
Rebecca's Tale (Sally Beauman) in Waterstones I bought it immediately. It's written in quite a different style (understandably as it's by a totally different author, but sometimes these things shock you

) It's split into four sections. Colonel Julyan begins the investigation into Rebecca’s death, twenty years after the event (if I recall he was about to expire, and decided to resolve the mystery once and for all or something…) Enter Terence Grey, a historian who’s up from down South. The Colonel doesn’t appear to like him much (at first anyway) and I think he puts Grey through a few ‘tests’ before he tells him anything of importance. Anyway, they do their bit, and then it swaps to Greys perspective for the second section, and you learn a bit more about the mystery. For the third section. Beauman skips back twenty years and writes from Rebecca’s perspective. That was the bit I was worried about, I felt Beauman was taking a few liberties there – how could she possibly write as Rebecca? Didn’t quite trust her not to balls it up. Anyway, then last section is back in 1950s and written by Ellie, Colonel Julyans daughter.
Basically, I bought it with little thought (as I do most books) and when I got round to beginning it I was pretty convinced I was going to be very annoyed by the end. It turned out to be an OK read, but maybe a bit of an anti-climax. I’d kind of recommend it, but not if you’re after more of
Rebecca. If that makes sense.
