The Secret of Laurel Oaks Review
The
Secret of Laurel Oaks review by Harriet Klausner
Since mom is giving a presentation at the Biophysical Anthropology Conference
on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge, her entire family decided to attend. Besides
mom, dad, and their two children (fourteen year old Gabe and thirteen year old
Lila) leave their home in Albuquerque to stay for a few nights at creepy
allegedly haunted (that is what the Smithsonian web site claims) Laurel Oaks
B&B.
The ghost is Daphne an antebellum young slave accused of murdering her Master
Judge Nethercott’s wife and two daughters Molly and Alice in 1840 at Laurel Oaks
Plantation; Daphne died in the nearby Mississippi. She has never moved on
because she is obsessed to know what truly happened on that horrific day when
four females died. She believes that Lila is the person she has waited for to
help her investigate the murders.
The supernatural aspects of the tale has been done a zillion ties, but is
somewhat refreshed with non-graphic implications of the uglier realism like
molestation and rape on a slave plantation. The story line rotates perspective
between the two teen female stars with Daphne’s occurring in 1840 and the more
fascinating of the two “tales”. Young adult fans will enjoy Lila’s cold case
murder investigation.
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