'Suspenseful ... boasts a deeper emphasis on character, politics, and social issues. A must for Constance's growing fan base.' STARRED REVIEW
* Booklist *
'Stewart's intrepid deputy sheriff is back, this time enmeshed in a 1916 local election with uncomfortable contemporary resonance ... Constance may just have turned 40, but this tough-minded, generous-hearted believer in second chances and equal rights for women looks set for many more adventures. A welcome addition to this sui generis series, always fresh thanks to its vividly imagined characters firmly grounded in historical fact.' STARRED REVIEW
* Kirkus *
'This is becoming a terrific historical mystery series.'
-- Jon Wise * Weekend Sport *
'Highly engaging without sanitising the attitudes of the times.'
* The Herald *
'Historically fascinating and with truculent characters and intrigues, these books are a guilty pleasure for fans of Janet Plum or Maisie Dobbs and deserve a larger audience.'
-- Maxim Jakbowski * Crime Time *
'Stewart skillfully builds nail-biting suspense ... The blend of practicality, forthrightness, and compassion in her first-person narration is sure to satisfy series fans and win new admirers.'
* Publishers Weekly *
'Miss Kopp Just Won't Quit is everything I look for in solid historical fiction ... Constance Kopp makes a fierce and lively heroine who stands out as a strong female character in all the best ways.'
-- Dee Carey *
Half-deserted Streets *
'The talented author has made a well-researched, rollicking story out of the three of them and Sheriff Heath, so that the reader can experience a flavour of life for women in the early 1900s in New Jersey just before the war.'
-- Caitlln Hicks * New York Journal of Books *
'The books are based on actual events with characters and deeds embellished to create marvellous historical novels. The present book finds Constance as both deputy and matron of the female prisoners at the Hackensack county jail in the autumn of 1916. Though she often sleeps at the jail, she still lives on the farm with her sisters ... the novel excels in revisiting a vanished time, place and sensibility.'
-- Katherine A. Powers * The Washington Post *
'The fourth, funniest and best of the Miss Kopp books finds Constance Kopp at a crossroads ... Kopp's first-person account is wry and un-self-pitying, despite the long odds she faces both at the job and at home, where her quirky sisters are after her to bring home more money and less notoriety. The novel is more interested in characters than plot but it's great fun - fans of the Maisie Dobbs series will love it - and a timely reminder that women have been fighting the equity battle for generations.'
-- Chris Hewitt * Minneapolis Star Tribune *