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The Last Twelve Miles

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Two real, brilliant women on opposite sides of the law, in a deadly game of cat and mouse…

1926. Washington, D.C.

The Coast Guard is losing the Prohibition Rum War, but they have a new, secret weapon to crack smuggler codes, intercept traffic, and destroy the rum trade one skiff at a time. That secret weapon is a 5'2" mastermind in heels, who also happens to be a wife and mother: Mrs. Elizebeth Smith Friedman, one half of the husband-and-wife pair who invented cryptanalysis.

Bahamas

Cleo Lythogoe, The Bahama Queen, announces her retirement while regaling the thugs at the bar with tales of murder and mayhem on the high seas. Marie Waite, listening in, knows an opportunity when she hears it, and she wants the crown for herself so badly she can taste it. So begins Marie's plan to rise as rumrunner royalty long enough to get her family in the black. But the more sophisticated her operation grows, the more she appears on the radar of the feds.

Meanwhile, Elizebeth is the only codebreaker battling scores of smugglers. Despite the strain of solving thousands of intercepted messages, traveling the country, and testifying in court, Elizabeth’s work becomes personal—especially when she discovers the identity of her premier adversary is the notorious Marie Waite.

From the glamorous world of D.C. Intelligence to the sultry shores of the Straits of Florida, The Last Twelve Miles is based on the true story of two women masterminds trying to outwit each other in a dangerous and fascinating high stakes game.

288 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 4, 2024

About the author

Erika Robuck

11 books1,229 followers
Erika Robuck is the national bestselling author of historical fiction including SISTERS OF NIGHT AND FOG, THE INVISIBLE WOMAN, and HEMINGWAY’S GIRL. Her articles have appeared in Writer Unboxed, Crime Reads, and Writer's Digest, and she has been named a Maryland Writer’s Association Notable Writer of 2024. A boating enthusiast, amateur historian, and teacher, she resides in Annapolis with her husband and three sons.

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5 stars
152 (23%)
4 stars
294 (46%)
3 stars
160 (25%)
2 stars
26 (4%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 216 reviews
Profile Image for Karren  Sandercock .
1,028 reviews253 followers
May 25, 2024
The Bahama Queen Cleo Lythogoe retires, Marie Waite wants to follow in her footsteps and she vows nothing is going to get in her way. Elizebeth Smith Friedman is a special agent for the Treasury Department and she works for the Coast Guards Communications Section.

Alcohol is in high demand in prohibition America and it’s illegal to make, sell and smuggle it into the country. The stage is set, two women, both married, mothers, and who will outsmart the other?

Elizebeth and her husband William invented cryptanalysis during The Great War, they live in Washington, D.C., and she’s the only code-breaker, her job is to intercept thousands of messages, and crack the codes.

Marie grew up poor, she wants to make a lot of money and have the lifestyle she deserves. Marie’s married to Charlie and he’s a drunk, he won’t listen to her ideas and she’s getting frustrated with him. Marie starts buying boats and she begins creating her empire, smuggling booze, from the Bahama’s and Cuba to Florida, and once she enters American waters the last twelve miles are the most dangerous and where the coast guards are patrolling.

Marie comes up with all sorts of plans, signals, decoys and codes to outsmart the authorities and she has no idea another women is trying to find out who’s the new rum runner, their identity, stop them and she will testify in court.

I received a copy of The Last Twelve Miles from the publisher and Edelweiss Plus in exchange for an honest review. Erika Robuck uses real facts and her imagination to write her latest riveting historical fiction novel.

Set in 1926, Elizebeth’s a wife and mother, she worked whilst pregnant and afterwards, not many women at the time would have had such a stressful, demanding and high paid job and it was a real juggle and with a supportive husband, she suffered from mum guilt. I liked how the narrative included the couple's love of reading, books and poetry and curiosities collection and William's struggles with shell shock and nightmares from serving in The Great War.

Spanish Marie is one determined lady and you didn’t want to mess with her, and she’s drawn into the dangerous and sinister world of rum running, and I had no idea Miami, Florida was already full of bad guys and women and it was a seedy and sinister place, full of inlets and back stabbers. Five stars from me and I highly recommend, a perfect choice for book clubs and women’s history month.
Profile Image for "Avonna.
1,314 reviews541 followers
February 24, 2024
Check out all my reviews at: https://www.avonnalovesgenres.com

THE LAST TWELVE MILES by Erika Robuck is a thrilling historical fiction story of two women, each brilliant, going head-to-head on opposite sides of the law during the Prohibition Era southern rum wars. While I have read about Elizebeth Friedman and her contributions to cryptanalysis, Spanish Marie was new to me, and this author brought both women to vivid life for me as I was reading.

Mrs. Elizebeth Smith Friedman and her husband invented cryptanalysis during WWI. Elizebeth has gone on to work for the Coast Guard during Prohibition to crack smugglers’ codes so the Coast Guard can intercept smugglers and destroy their illegal alcohol. Her primary focus is on the Cuban, Bahamian, and Florida routes. She is the Coast Guards secret weapon to capturing many law breakers.

Marie Waite is the wife of a rum runner and when she learns the queen of the runners is retiring, she seizes the opportunity and becomes Spanish Marie. She takes advantage of every new technology to evade capture and continue her rise to the top of her chosen illegal trade.

Spanish Marie becomes Elizebeth’s obsession in a cat and mouse game.

I loved this story so much! Ms. Robuck brings both women to life on the page, even though the author acknowledges that information on Spanish Marie is more lore than fact. This is a historical fiction book that grabbed me from page one, and I was unable to put the book down. Elizebeth has a full life outside of the home with her cryptanalysis and must learn how to balance her work and home life as a wife and mother, which is an unusual position to be in during the 1920’s. Marie begins life poor and makes terrible choices in men, but it leads to her ambition and endless need for wealth. Elizebeth and Marie are fully developed characters that you can empathize with in different ways, and it makes their protagonist/antagonist battles even more fascinating.

I highly recommend this amazing historical fiction!
Profile Image for Erin.
3,307 reviews474 followers
May 20, 2024
Thanks to NetGalley and SOURCEBOOKS Landmark for access to this title. All opinions expressed are my own.

Erika Robuck brings readers back to the Prohibition era and recounts the tale of two women: cryptographer Elizebeth Friedman and rumrunner Marie Waite. Although both women are mothers and wives, life has led them down different paths, which are about to intersect in a classic cat-and-mouse game.

I liked the novel. Marie's chapters were my favourite and I was cheering for her to get the best of those pursuing her. That could have made Elizebeth Friedman raise her eyebrows but I cannot help it. Erika Robuck just wrote her to be that compelling of a character. I appreciated the author's notes at both the beginning and the end of the book.

As another reviewer wrote, this book would make an exciting movie.



Expected Publication 04/06/24
Goodreads Review 20/05/24
Profile Image for Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader.
2,400 reviews31.5k followers
July 14, 2024
I think all hist fic fans are familiar with Erika Robuck’s novels, but if you aren’t, they are must-reads. I’m pretty sure this is the first book I’ve read focused on rum running during Prohibition with two women as the leads. Sooooooo good.

About the book: “"Set against the backdrop of the Prohibition Rum Wars, Robuck has brought two real-life figures to the page with heartfelt intimacy and crackling suspense. A fascinating read!" — Chanel Cleeton, New York Times bestselling author of The Cuban Heiress
Two real, brilliant women on opposite sides of the law, in a deadly game of cat and mouse…”

I also loved this author’s note: “Fans of both my war novels and HEMINGWAY'G GIRL will enjoy THE LAST TWELVE MILES--which even includes some HEMINGWAY'S GIRL "Easter Eggs." Whether you've read that novel or not, however, this Catch Me If You Can style book is best read on a boat or on a beach, while sipping a rum cocktail of some kind.”

Elizebeth Friedman, who along with her husband, invented cryptanalysis, is one of the main characters featured. In this novel, she’s working with the Coast Guard to crack smugglers’ codes during Prohibition. She is beyond skilled at what she does.

Marie Waite is the daughter of a rum runner and wants to be Queen of the trade. What ensues is a cat and mouse where Elizebeth and Marie become arch nemeses, Catch Me If You Can style. Both are formidable and endearing. It was hard to know which one to cheer for, so I couldn’t help siding with both at one time or another!

Overall, this is quite the ride of a read, and I enjoyed it immensely. It’s exciting and enchanting at the same time.

I received a gifted copy.

Many of my reviews can also be found on my blog: www.jennifertarheelreader.com and instagram: www.instagram.com/tarheelreader
Profile Image for Mallory.
1,593 reviews231 followers
July 14, 2024
I was very intrigued when I read in the description this was about two real women who were remarkable that I hadn’t heard of. I will say while the writing was good I thought the story moved too slowly and I would have liked a little more action. Elizebeth and Marie were both great characters (and women). Who would have guessed that a DC code breaker thwarting the rum runners was a woman? When Marie, mastermind behind he and her husband’s rum running business, finds out she kicks herself for not guessing. Their game of cat and mouse was fun and I could have done with more of that and less of the family pieces from both women. Overall I gave this one a 3.5 which I rounded up because the author did a good job highlighting two strong women from history.
Profile Image for Literary Redhead.
2,331 reviews594 followers
January 12, 2024
A brilliant histfic novel about two gutsy women: a codebreaker for the U.S. Coast Guard and a rumrunner using coded communication during Prohibition. Robuck gives us such a beautifully written portrait of each woman that we find ourselves cheering for both. Unputdownable!
160 reviews6 followers
January 9, 2024
Absolutely loved this historical fiction story of two intelligent, sly, tenacious, strongwilled women on opposite sides of the law during the Rum Wars and Prohibition.
It was a joy to learn about cryptanalyist, Elizebeth Smith Friedman, whose extensive work puts her in a consulting position to help the Coast Guard to intercept and crack codes of "rumrunners" in order to apprehend them. There were 12 miles of US waters off the Florida Keys where most activity took place. Elizebeth tracks the infamous "Spanish Marie".
It is Marie's story that makes this book phenomenal for me. She is the "Bonnie" of "Bonnie and Clyde". Her humble beginnings, poor choice in men, and scrappy antics are fun to read and add layers to her character but it's her abundant ambition and fearless desire for wealth that makes her the perfect antihero.
Thank you to NetGalley and the author, Erika Robuck, for the ARC of this book. I loved it so much I'm buying multiple copies for my reader friends.
Profile Image for Saltygalreads.
268 reviews9 followers
January 4, 2024
Summary: The legend of Spanish Marie lives on in Florida and Cuba. During the Prohibition Era, Marie and Charlie Waite ran a rum-running empire, transporting and wholesaling liquor from Cuba and Bahamas to the US. On the opposing side was the US Coastguard and a husband-and-wife team specialized in cryptanalysis, or the deciphering of secret codes and messages. Elizebeth and William Friedman worked as agents of the US government in cracking the codes used by smugglers to communicate and transport their goods. The title refers to the fact that there is a distance of 90 nautical miles from Cuba to Florida; for 78 of those miles their cargo was perfectly legal on the seas, but for the last 12 miles in US waters their cargo of liquor was a criminal offense.

Thoughts: This was a well-researched and conceived novel depicting the author’s vision of the battle of wits between Marie and Elizebeth. Marie is a fully developed character in this story, struggling with her alcoholic and temperamental husband, and aspiring to legendary status among the smugglers in the goal of providing herself and her children with all the trappings of the good life. Marie desperately wants to overcome the poverty and shame of her early life and to be important and memorable, however she has no intention of spending time in prison. Elizebeth is motivated by the sheer love of cracking a mystery which seems impenetrable to other people. This is a novel of historical fiction, in which the author acknowledges that not all the facts are known about Spanish Marie and much of what exists is legend and lore. However, she does an amazing job crafting a story which blends historical fact with her interpretation of events and personalities. I thoroughly enjoyed this story and recommend it to any fan of historical fiction or anyone with an interest in the rum-running trade during Prohibition.
Profile Image for Brianne.
8 reviews
March 26, 2024
Two women are on opposite sides of the prohibition war—a code-breaker and a rum runner. Each woman is determined to succeed while living in a man's world. This book was a great blast from the past, and I highly recommend it to anyone, especially historical fiction lovers.
Profile Image for Stacie.
1,659 reviews105 followers
July 3, 2024
I’ve loved every Erika Robuck book I’ve read. If you love reading about fascinating women in history, read an Erika Robuck novel.

Set in 1920s Washington D.C., Miami, Key West, Bahamas, and Cuba, Robuck introduces readers to two fascinating women on both sides of the law. Elizebeth is a top-secret code-breaker working for the US Coast Guard. Marie is a rumrunner, smuggling liquor across the sea into Florida during Prohibition. The US Coast Guard can’t keep up with all the traffic and they enlist Elizebeth to help. Elizebeth and her husband both work for the government and are the inventors of cryptoanalysis, a process of using algorithms to decipher the secret text.

Through alternating chapters, readers are allowed into the minds of Elizebeth and Marie which offers readers a unique perspective. In one chapter, you’ll hope that Elizebeth can determine the rumrunners’ codes so they are caught. But, in the next chapter, you’ll be rooting for Marie to get away with her latest liquor delivery.

Both Elizebeth and Marie are mothers yet have different motivations. Elizebeth is torn between wanting to be a mother to her children and using her brain for the specific sophisticated job of decoding messages. Marie enjoys motherhood but doesn’t like her husband. She is blinded by her desire to keep making more and more money and get as far away from a life of poverty as she can. As she makes more money, her husband gambles it away or spends it frivolously. Marie is driven by money and can’t get enough of it which may just lead to her downfall.

As you can imagine there is a lot of discontent in Marie’s household. As she gets smarter and brings in new technology (radios), Elizebeth has to work harder and more hours to decode their messages. The cat-and-mouse chase gets intense, people are killed, and danger lurks everywhere. It’s a thrilling adventure right up to the end and I was sad to finish reading about the lives of these women.

“The enemy of my enemy is my friend.”

This prohibition story was brand new to me. I’ve read other prohibition stories set in the Midwest since Al Capone ran a lot of the liquor runs from Chicago. Robuck describes her setting with such detail that I felt like I could almost hear the boats coming into shore. The title of the book relates to The Last Twelve Miles of the journey to the US Coast. Those twelve miles are when the rumrunner’s load of liquor is considered contraband. The first part of the journey their cargo is legal. In those last twelve miles, the codes become so important and the race to escape or trick the Coast Guard becomes imperative.

Two intelligent women in history, one who enforced the law and one who regularly broke it, kept me turning the pages. It was a thrilling adventure and one that left me wanting to know more about these women and googling their images. Fans of historical fiction that isn’t a war story will find this fast-paced novel about real women in history to be a great read.
Profile Image for Lori D.
4,013 reviews113 followers
June 19, 2024
There is nothing better than historical fiction and this story fits the bill!

Real historical facts of the time of prohibition, sets two women on opposite sides of the law. One a brilliant code cracker working with the Coast Guard to stop the incoming alcohol.

The other woman, Queen of the Rum Runners ready to step down. But another is waiting in the background wanting to take over.

Based on a true story, you will not be able to put it down!
Profile Image for Kristen.
2,375 reviews73 followers
June 13, 2024
This sounded so good, but I knew pretty early into it that it wasn't for me.

I love stories about strong female characters, and this book ostensibly has two that the book was about. I'm also interested in the 1920s as an era, and Prohibition is another thing that interests me.

The problem for me was that both of the two main characters are introduced with a bunch of emotional and relationship baggage. I wanted the story to get to the roles these women play in the two sides of Prohibition, not their personal issues.

Possibly the story pivots further in to actually get to the story the blurb sold me, and away from their personal dramas but I wasn't sure how long I would have to wait and how much more personal detritus I would have to get through for that, and I just wasn't interested in that, so I'm moving onto something else. This was a miss for me.
Profile Image for Sharlene.
507 reviews
February 28, 2024
The Last Twelve Miles by Erika Robuck is a historical fiction novel that tells the true story of two women who led criminal and legal operations during the Prohibition era.
The novel is based on extensive research and historical sources, and it features a captivating plot and realistic characters. The novel also explores various themes and issues related to crime and justice, and the role of women in history and society. This book is suitable for readers who like historical fiction, suspense, and strong female protagonists. I rate this book 4 out of 5 stars.
Profile Image for Emily.
97 reviews
January 12, 2024
I had such high hopes for this one. A book about code-breaking and rum-running shouldn't be dry as dust, but this one is. This books reads like a textbook but offers little detail some how. The prose goes beyond telling instead of showing to actually beating the reader over the head with the obvious (ie, "Charlie wears only a sleeveless, white undershirt, pants, and suspenders to hold up his pants." What else do suspenders do?). The characters are cardboard. The code-breaker sure frets a lot about being pregnant. The rum-runner is bitter about growing up in poverty and reminds us of that constantly. There is very little detail about breaking codes (and why is Elizebeth working on such secret material in public, such as on a train?). The book takes place in glamorous locations such as Key West and Miami, and none of them are brought to life. The only allusions to suspense or emotions are the characters holding their breath a lot. And the ending really doesn't wrap things up. The author's note at the end was far more interesting than the preceeding novel and left me saying, "I'd rather read about that!"

I received a free advance copy from the publisher in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Rachel.
2,263 reviews90 followers
January 14, 2024
The Last Twelve Miles by Erika Robuck is a great historical fiction set in the 1920s that I really enjoyed.

I really liked this novel that gave a dual narrative of two equally interesting and complex main characters that were on opposing sides during the Prohibition era.

While both women were quite different, they still had similarities when it came down to it. It was interesting to learn more about the code breaking during this decade in the US.

Fascinating.

4/5 stars

Thank you NG and Sourcebooks Landmark for this wonderful arc and in return I am submitting my unbiased and voluntary review and opinion.

I am posting this review to my GR and Bookbub accounts immediately and will post it to my Amazon, Instagram, and B&N accounts upon publication on 6/4/24.
Profile Image for Alexandra.
309 reviews1 follower
February 29, 2024
Perfect read for my drive to Key West! I found it hard to decide if I wanted the good gal or the "bad" gal to win! Historical fiction with two strong female leads on opposite sides of the law during Prohibition. A female code breaker working for the Coasties intercepting rum smugglers and one of the most infamous female smugglers who runs an empire through the trading routes in Miami and Key West. A fantastic read as I didn't know about female code breakers and I enjoy strong female characters especially those from history that are not well known.
Profile Image for Zoe.
2,083 reviews288 followers
Read
June 4, 2024
Fascinating, compelling, and fresh!

The Last Twelve Miles is an evocative, intriguing tale that sweeps you between Washington D.C. and the Bahamas during 1926 and into the lives of two women; Elizabeth Friedman, a talented codebreaker tasked with intercepting and deciphering messages to take down the most enterprising of smugglers, and Marie Waits, a mother of two who decides to take over the rum-running business from her husband and build it into something bigger and better than ever before.

The prose is expressive and rich. The characters are complex, intelligent, and driven. And the plot is a well-paced, entertaining mix of life, loss, love, justice, power, family, sacrifice, danger, corruption, politics, and ruthless ambition.

Overall, The Last Twelve Miles is an intricate, vivid, satisfying tale by Robuck inspired by real-life events that does a lovely job of interweaving historical facts and compelling fiction into an engaging tale that is atmospheric and highly absorbing.

Thank you to Sourcebooks Landmark for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Aubree.
1,028 reviews9 followers
June 25, 2024
Elizabeth and Marie are on opposite sides of the rum war during the Prohibition Era. Elizabeth is a code breaker for the US government and “Spanish Marie” is queen of the rum runners. Apparently this is based on a true story but in the audiobook at least, there was no note from the author so I’ll have to go research it. It was a compelling story and well told for the most part. The author did a great job of writing two compelling characters that you could root for… although I didn’t really care for the ending. But if it’s a true story and that’s really how it ended what can you do? I do wish some of the more exciting parts would have been written a bit more dynamically- occasionally they were even skipped over and talked about after the fact. I did very much appreciate though how the author wrote about deplorable people without making her book deplorable. So while not an instant favorite book, it was quite good and overall I do recommend it.

Content warning: a few mild curses from pretty much one character, mild violence, minor sexual references
Profile Image for Julie.
865 reviews67 followers
June 9, 2024
4.5/5 - Another fantastic novel by Erika that has two strong and fierce women who are on opposite sides of the law. I never knew about rum running or about the 12 mile law off the coast.
Profile Image for Leslie Zemeckis.
Author 3 books107 followers
May 18, 2024
Love this era of some rum runners and the detectives in pursuit - fierce unique female characters
Profile Image for Laura.
181 reviews
January 25, 2024
Thank you Erika Robuck and NetGalley for the ARC. This is a new historical fiction author for me. I really enjoyed the story of these two smart and strong women on both sides of the law. I was also unaware of this part of prohibition history. I will definitely be reading the author’s previous novels.

Favorite quote:

“Elizabeth’s heart feels a pang of jealousy, followed by a burst of love at seeing her happy family. It’s both freeing and agonizing not to be needed.
That is the nature of motherhood, she thinks.”
Profile Image for Dianna Rostad.
Author 1 book123 followers
February 24, 2024
The water is perfect to dive into this gorgeous summer read!! I loved boating through the aqua waters of South Florida and Key West on bootlegging runs in this cat and mouse game between two very different but equally interesting women in prohibition era Florida. The ending is spectacular! Highly recommend.

—Dianna Rostad, USA Today bestselling and award-winning author of You Belong Here Now
Profile Image for Dawn.
81 reviews4 followers
March 5, 2024
Oof, this book was tough for me. I almost DNF’d it a couple times, yet I persevered and finished the book in hopes that it would get better. It did not. The writing was repetitive and flat, as well as the characters. It read like the author was telling you about the people and events in more of a textbook/nonfiction way instead of using the real life events wrapped in fiction. Therefore, it was hard to connect with the characters Mary Waite and Elizebeth Smith Friedman, and to grasp the essence of who they may have been in that period of time. Overall: this book was a miss for me, though the topic was interesting, just poorly conveyed.
Thank you NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Christine M in Texas (stamperlady50).
1,440 reviews154 followers
March 13, 2024
The Last Twelve Miles
By: Erika Robuck
Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark
Pages: 368
Publication date: June 4

4 🍹🍹🍹🍹

1926- During Prohibition, smuggling is rampant and the coast guard is having a hard time keeping up.

Enter a “secret weapon”, a wife and mother no one would suspect. We follow two gutsy women Elizabeth and Marie. Smuggling, code breaking, bootlegging and danger in Florida. The court scene and fabulous details of the action scenes were described so well that I could picture the scenes. Get ready for one wild ride!
#thelasttwelvemiles, #ericarobuck, #sourcebookslandmark, #bookreview, #stamperlady50, #booksconnectus
Profile Image for Judy Collins.
2,967 reviews429 followers
June 2, 2024
Erika Robuck's latest historical fiction, THE LAST TWELVE MILES, is a masterpiece, from the captivating front cover to the meticulous research, glamour, intrigue, danger, exotic locales, and suspense.

Inspired by a true story, this gripping novel unfolds a dangerous, electrifying high-stakes game of cat and mouse between two brilliant women on opposite sides of the law.

About ...

1920s Prohibition Era and the Rum War: Involving plenty of illegal booze, organized crime, greed, money, violence, rum-running, bootlegging, smuggling, danger, and desperation.

Special Agent Elizebeth Friedman is headquartered in Washington, D.C. She is one of the few women assigned to the Key West area, where smuggling is high. At 34 and pregnant (that she keeps a secret), she has her eye on the King of Rumrunners and then Marie Waite, known as 'Spanish Marie'—married with children.

What drives these women? Is it the thrill of the chase, the desire for adventure, or something deeper? Will they use their powers for good or evil, or will their paths blur in the gray areas of morality? Who will win the game?

Marie Waite is a real-life bootlegger. She facilitated a fleet of boats that moved illegal liquor between Miami, The Bahamas and Cuba. Named, Spanish Marie, she loved nothing better than being at the helm while bringing home the goods while escaping the Coast Guard. Marie deceives others with her false image.

Elizebeth Friedman, along with her husband, was a code breaker hired by the government to help bring down Marie.

Told from the perspectives of Elizebeth and Marie. Are they both heroes?

From the glamorous world of D.C. Intelligence to the sultry shores of the Straits of Florida, there is non-stop action, glamour, and suspense.

My thoughts...

Erika Robuck's skill shines through in her creation of two fascinating women, set against the backdrop of the Prohibition Era. Elizebeth, the lone woman in her field, grapples with the pressures of a male-dominated profession, while Marie, born into poverty, yearns for wealth. Both women are complex, intriguing, and multi-faceted, navigating a world that often underestimates them, much like the modern world of today.

We also see the compelling differences in the relationships (Elizebeth and William) compared to (Marie and Charlie).

THE LAST TWELVE MILES is a delight with a colorful cast of characters. Rich in character, the author's third novel using women protagonists as foils for each other is electrifying and engrossing. Each woman has to balance and compartmentalize their personal and professional life.

Richly woven and riveting! As a South Floridian, I enjoy books set in my area and the Keys. With strong takeaways from good versus evil, for better or worse, walking the line between darkness and light is a balancing act, and addiction can be deadly. It is all about how we use those powers.

Recs...

Well done! I highly recommend it for fans of the author's war novels and Hemingway's Girl, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and those who enjoy well-researched, smartly written historical fiction and strong female protagonists. I enjoyed the Author's notes, references, reading group guide, and conversation with the Author.

Thanks to Sourcebooks Landmark and NetGalley for a gifted digital ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Blog review posted @
JudithDCollins.com
@JudithDCollins | #JDCMustReadBooks
Pub Date: June 4, 2024
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Profile Image for Deidre.
347 reviews24 followers
February 23, 2024
Many thanks to Netgalley and Sourcebook Landmark for an ARC copy in exchange for an honest review. This book follows two women, one of them is a government employee while the other is on the bootlegs run to bring alcohol into the US during prohibition.

The book takes place during Prohibition, following Marie Waite, wife of a rumrunner and mother of two little ones and Elizebeth, a codebreaker for the United States. The two don’t know each other but are battling against one another in a head to head in a cat and mouse game. As Marie sees her husband’s shortcomings she realizes she can step in for him, soon becoming rumrunning royalty. But what she doesn’t anticipate is the more refine her operations becomes the bigger the target on her back grows. Meanwhile, Elizebeth is intercepting codes and ciphers on the growing operations of Marie and her crew. Elizebeth’s work becomes personal as she discovers Marie is the primary target of the operation.

I couldn’t put this book down. I haven’t read much in the Prohibition era but I can see the drawl of rumrunning and getting involved in it. However, it was interesting to read how obsessive Elizebeth became as she got deeper into the case. The mastermind games the two played a while trying to make a living and protect their families was an interesting point I didn’t see coming as I read. One thing I love about Erika’s books is that she finds real women who history has spoken little about and bring them front and center within her books. Elizebeth and Maria are two that weren’t on my radar before this book but they won’t be leaving my mind for a long while.

This book will be published June 4, 2024.
Profile Image for Fay.
480 reviews28 followers
June 3, 2024
Thank you Sourcebooks for my #gifted ARC and thank you Libro.fm and Tantor Media for my #gifted ALC of The Last Twelve Miles!

𝐓𝐢𝐭𝐥𝐞: 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐋𝐚𝐬𝐭 𝐓𝐰𝐞𝐥𝐯𝐞 𝐌𝐢𝐥𝐞𝐬
𝐀𝐮𝐭𝐡𝐨𝐫: 𝐄𝐫𝐢𝐤𝐚 𝐑𝐨𝐛𝐮𝐜𝐤
𝐍𝐚𝐫𝐫𝐚𝐭𝐨𝐫: 𝐑𝐨𝐦𝐲 𝐍𝐨𝐫𝐝𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐠𝐞𝐫
𝐏𝐮𝐛 𝐃𝐚𝐭𝐞: 𝐉𝐮𝐧𝐞 𝟒, 𝟐𝟎𝟐𝟒

★★★★★

The Last Twelve Miles was an absolute delight! I went into this one completely blind and absolutely loved it! I have not read many books set during the Prohibition Era, and this one was so interesting to me. The amount of research that went into this book was so evident and I loved learning more at the end with the Author’s Note. Elizabeth and Marie were both such well-developed characters and I enjoyed my time reading about each of them. This book was so well done and I felt like it just went by so quickly because I could not put it down. This is one of those historic fiction reads that I will be recommending to everyone!

🎧I started with the physical book, but eventually switched to the physical book, narrated by Romy Nordlinger. I really enjoyed my time listening to Nordlinger and felt like she did a great job switching between the two main characters. She was dynamic and just a joy to listen to and I would highly recommend this one on audio if you are listening for a great historical fiction to get lost in!

🌴Dual POV
🌴Code Breaker vs. Rumrunner
🌴Strong Female Protagonists
🌴Set During the Prohibition Era
🌴Fast Paced
Profile Image for Julia✨Book Reviews by Jules✨.
302 reviews31 followers
Want to read
February 17, 2024
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with this book in exchange for my review! All opinions are my own.

I thought this book was an entertaining read. It wasn't amazing, yet it wasn't horrible. Some parts of the book were not as exciting as other parts. As I have stated in previous reviews on my social platforms. I have found that sometimes I need to be in a very specific mood to read certain books. This is why I am a fan of re-reading both books that I enjoyed and those that I didn't enjoy. I will for sure consider reading another book by Erika Robuck in the future!
And remember, all humans are unique so someone else might hate a book that I love and vice versa!


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Profile Image for Donna.
556 reviews11 followers
March 26, 2024
What an exciting historical fiction! Erika Robuck has written a thrilling, well-researched book centered on two actual women in the time of prohibition, Elizebeth Smith Friedman and Marie Waite. Her writing brings these two women and those around them vividly to life. Elizebeth and her husband invented cryptanalysis during World War One. Marie and her husband are rumrunners. Elizebeth has been hired by the U. S. government to decode transmissions by the rumrunners to aid the Coast Guard in capture of rumrunners, in the critical last 12 miles to the U. S. coast. The book is alternately narrated by Elizebeth and Marie, as it follows the two women, one using her skills in codebreaking to stop the transport of illegal liquor, and the other desperate to both avoid capture and the poverty and violence that is her life. I found this book hard to put down, and the authors notes at the end are a must read! Thank you to the author, publisher, and Netgalley for my advance copy of the book. The opinions of this review are my own.
Profile Image for Dara.
398 reviews3 followers
May 21, 2024
The Florida Keys, Cuba, Bahamas - love the settings. Great idea for characters, Elizebeth the government code breaker and Spanish Marie the newest Queen rum runner set against each other. I am intrigued by the two strong, intelligent women battling it out from both sides of the law. Although I enjoyed the story and it had a lot of action, I wanted more clever banter from these women! Sometimes the narrative feels forced and falls flat. I loved the main characters but did feel like Elizebeth talks as much about her pregnancy as codebreaking and Marie about growing up in poverty as rum running. They held my interest but could use additional character development. Give us more specifics of the codebreaking and insights into the life of a female rumrunner. It was clear a lot of research went into this but it wasn’t conveyed well and left me wanting more.

Thanks to Netgalley for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
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