"The White Lady is a triumph of storytelling. Rarely have I been swept up into a novel, into the lives of the main characters, so quickly and thoroughly. Winspear creates in Elinor White (The White Lady), a complex, endearing, achingly flawed hero. This is both fast-paced and thoughtful, bold and nuanced, a thriller that is thrillingly human. I loved it." -- Louise Penny
"The White Lady is wonderful . . . a tense and twisty character-driven thriller, a heartfelt tribute to the twentieth century's bravest women, and a perfect match between story and storyteller. No one does this better than Jacqueline Winspear." -- Lee Child
"Ms. Winspear ties her story elements together in a remarkably exciting manner." -- Wall Street Journal
"After 17 Maisie novels, fans have a new character to love: Elinor White, an enigmatic war hero at the center of The White Lady, Winspear's second stand-alone novel. White is very much her own woman, but she's just as inspirational as Maisie. . . . . she is such an appealing character--and one I hope readers will get to know better." -- Washington Post
"Winspear's Maisie Dobbs books have explored the intersection of criminality and war--the chaos of battle and bombs providing the perfect cover for a variety of criminal enterprises--and she expands on the subject with characteristic intelligence and psychological acuity in The White Lady." -- Air Mail
"With focus on White's interior experience and a subplot involving the post-war London crime syndicates, this book sees Winspear taking things up several notches in terms of theme and character development. However, she also turns up suspense with a structure that toggles between present, her war-torn childhood and her Special Operations Executive doings during World War II." -- NPR
"A poignant story of courage, misogyny, and misused power. A tense history-based thriller filled with anguish and suspense." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Winspear is an absolute master of the character-driven thriller . . . [and] the real strength of the novel, lies in the poignant and beautifully written backstory of Elinor's childhood in war-torn Belgium and her personal losses in a devastated London." -- Booklist (starred review)
"Smart, nuanced . . . . The chapters illuminating Elinor's dramatic backstory add vulnerability to her characterization, enriching the suspenseful main narrative. This will please both Winspear's fans and new readers." -- Publishers Weekly
"The White Lady is a phenomenal read. You are prisoner from the opening paragraph until the suspenseful conclusion . . . .This thrilling book reveals much about mankind. Humans can be brutal, tender, kind, treacherous, cold, friendly, tremendously loyal, deceiving, brave, cowardly. Jacqueline Winspear includes all of these traits in The White Lady." -- New York Journal of Books