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Book Reviews of The Girl Who Remembered Snow

The Girl Who Remembered Snow
The Girl Who Remembered Snow
Author: Charles Mathes
ISBN-13: 9780373262571
ISBN-10: 0373262574
Publication Date: 11/1/1997
Pages: 300
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 13

3.2 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: Worldwide Library
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Girl Who Remembered Snow on + 407 more book reviews
This was a good mystery about someone learning the truth about her past. I liked the interactions between Emma and Timoteo in San Marcos.
Mysbib avatar reviewed The Girl Who Remembered Snow on + 82 more book reviews
Emma Passant's grandfather has been murdered. What's happening? Why did he use a fake name? What is the truth about the memories of walking with a loved one (was it her grandfather) in snow? He always said she imagined it. Emma is a professional magician, but she needs a special magic to figure this all out.
reviewed The Girl Who Remembered Snow on + 174 more book reviews
Charles Mathes' "The Girl Who Remembered Snow" not only has an interesting title, but it has a plot that is well thought through and a protagonist who is unusual and appealing. All of the characters have a memorable part to play in this mystery that starts out in San Francisco with the introduction of Emma Passant, a female magician who travels around the country performing her magic show. Emma has lived with her grandfather, Pepe Passant, since she was little, and now her beloved grandfather has been murdered.

All her life Emma remembers being a little girl holding hands with an adult and walking through deep snow, but she has never been out of the country and was never in snow as a child. The memory haunts her year after year.

Emma must bury her grandfather's ashes in the water at his request, so she is on a ferry to do just that when she asks a handsome French genteman if he will create a little scene while she does the burial because she is afraid of being caught throwing the box of ashes in the water. Emma can be very humble. Henri-Pierre Caraignac
yells, "I love San Francisco!" a couple of times and all eyes are on him, not Emma. Mission accomplished. Henri asks Emma to dinner.

Before Emma can have dinner with her new found friend, Henri is found murdered and with the same gun that killed her grandfather. Emma must put the pieces of this strange situation together.

This is an excellent mystery with several important characters and locations involved. It moves along fast and is very enjoyable. This is the first of Mathes' books that I've read, and although not a series with the same characters, I've ordered another of his "The Girl Who..." mysteries because I had such fun with this one.

A cozy mystery that will take you to international locations that are necessary for Emma to find out the real truth about herself and her family, and that's with a twist.