The Last of Mrs. DeBrugh by H. Sivia

(16 User reviews)   4148
By Sophie Turner Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Level Four
Sivia, H. Sivia, H.
English
Okay, so picture this: a huge, crumbling English manor house, a fortune in lost jewels, and a family that seems to have more secrets than rooms in that drafty old place. That's the setup for 'The Last of Mrs. DeBrugh.' The story follows Eleanor, a young archivist hired to sort through a century's worth of clutter in the attic of DeBrugh Hall. Her job seems simple, but the deeper she digs, the clearer it becomes that the late matriarch, Agatha DeBrugh, left behind one final, elaborate puzzle. The family is tense, the staff is suspiciously loyal, and everyone seems to be waiting for Eleanor to find something specific. It's less of a treasure hunt and more of a gentle, relentless unraveling of a very privileged, very messy past. If you love stories where the house is a character and the real mystery isn't a crime but a hidden life, you'll get completely wrapped up in this one. It's the perfect book for a rainy afternoon when you want to be transported somewhere quietly intriguing.
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H. Sivia's The Last of Mrs. DeBrugh isn't a thriller with car chases or a murder on page one. Instead, it pulls you in with the quiet, persistent mystery of a life carefully boxed away.

The Story

Eleanor takes a temporary job cataloging the attic archives of DeBrugh Hall, the ancestral home of the once-wealthy, now-fading DeBrugh family. The formidable Agatha DeBrugh has recently passed, and her will is oddly specific about the disposition of her personal papers. As Eleanor sorts through letters, ledgers, and photographs, she notices gaps—missing years, redacted names, and the faint echo of a scandal everyone refuses to name. The surviving family members, each anxious about their inheritance, watch her work with a mix of hope and dread. The central question shifts from 'What will she find?' to 'Why did Agatha DeBrugh want this found now?' The payoff is in the delicate connections Eleanor makes between fragments, building a portrait of a woman constrained by her era who nonetheless carved out a secret world.

Why You Should Read It

This book won me over with its atmosphere. DeBrugh Hall feels real—you can almost smell the dust and old paper. Sivia is brilliant at showing how family legends harden into fact, and how the truth is often buried not in malice, but in simple shame or the desire to protect. Eleanor is a fantastic guide; she's not a detective, just a curious, methodical person doing her job, which makes every discovery feel earned. The real pleasure is watching her piece together a puzzle where the picture isn't of a villain, but of a complex woman making difficult choices. It’s a story about the weight of history, both familial and personal, and the quiet courage it can take to finally set it down.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who loved the vibe of The Remains of the Day or The Clockmaker's Daughter. If you enjoy character-driven stories where the past whispers through old houses and faded ink, this is your next great read. It's a slow, satisfying burn—a literary mystery that cares more about the 'why' than the 'who,' and leaves you thinking about the stories we choose to leave behind.



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Joseph Johnson
8 months ago

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1 year ago

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Donald Taylor
1 year ago

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Jessica Miller
1 year ago

The research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.

Linda Thomas
1 year ago

The citations provided are a goldmine for further academic study.

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4.5 out of 5 (16 User reviews )

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