Sally Cabot Gunning lives in Brewster, Massachusetts, with her husband, Tom. A lifelong resident of New England, she is active in local historical organizations and creates tours that showcase the three-hundred-year history of her village. She is the author of three "Satucket novels" (The Widow's War, Bound, and The Rebellion of Jane Clarke), as well as the historical novels Benjamin Franklin's Bastard and Monticello.
"Merging historical fact with riveting fiction . . . This is historical fiction at its best; highly recommended." -- Library Journal (starred review)"Provocative . . . Gunning infuses the story with suspense and intrigue [and] resists easy generalizations and stereotypes." -- Publishers Weekly"Readers will be swiftly turning the pages, eagerly cheering for the strong-willed widow." -- Booklist"Heartrending ... Gunning's vibrant portrayal of Lyddie's journey shows that the pursuit of happiness is not for the faint of heart." -- Boston Globe"Gripping, romantic, historically sound, and completely satisfying...I'll be surprised if I read a better historical novel this year." -- Historical Novels Review (The Historical Novel Society); "Editor's Choice"
Mystery author Gunning (Fire Water) moves to literary historical with this provocative tale of a whaling widow determined to forge a new life in colonial Cape Cod. When Lyddie Berry's husband drowns in 1761, her grief is compounded by the discovery that he's willed her the traditional widow's share-one-third use, but not ownership, of his estate. Lyddie's care, and the bulk of the estate, have been entrusted to their closest male relative, son-in-law Nathan Clarke, husband to their daughter Mehitable and a man used to ordering a household around. Lyddie's struggle to maintain a place in her radically changed home soon brings her into open conflict with an increasingly short-tempered Nathan and his children from two previous marriages. Gunning infuses the story with suspense and intrigue, as Lyddie's plight brings her into the orbit of local Indian Sam Cowett; community censure then brings her an ally in sympathetic lawyer Ebeneezer Freeman. Gunning resists easy generalizations and stereotypes while the story pulls in 18th-century law and Anglo-Indian relations, but the dull period dialogue, of which there is a great deal, reads awkwardly. Yet she makes Lyddie's struggle to remake her life credible and the world she inhabits complex. (Feb.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
"Merging historical fact with riveting fiction . . . This is historical fiction at its best; highly recommended." -- Library Journal (starred review)"Provocative . . . Gunning infuses the story with suspense and intrigue [and] resists easy generalizations and stereotypes." -- Publishers Weekly"Readers will be swiftly turning the pages, eagerly cheering for the strong-willed widow." -- Booklist"Heartrending ... Gunning's vibrant portrayal of Lyddie's journey shows that the pursuit of happiness is not for the faint of heart." -- Boston Globe"Gripping, romantic, historically sound, and completely satisfying...I'll be surprised if I read a better historical novel this year." -- Historical Novels Review (The Historical Novel Society); "Editor's Choice"
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