The Night Flower

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Night Flower by Sarah Stovell, Profile
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Sarah Stovell ISBN: 9781906994969
Publisher: Profile Publication: August 15, 2013
Imprint: Tindal Street Language: English
Author: Sarah Stovell
ISBN: 9781906994969
Publisher: Profile
Publication: August 15, 2013
Imprint: Tindal Street
Language: English

Two girls are brought together under the worst of circumstances: a prison ship taking them from London to 'parts beyond the sea'.

Miriam is a Romany girl drawn from freedom in the hills of the North-West to the city to eke a living playing her tin-whistle in a place where her people are despised. When her mother dies - from cholera, the 'gypsy disease' - she's caught breaking-and-entering and sentenced to transportation.

Rose has been brought up to expect more, but when her husband dies and her father is sent down for illegal slave-trading, she's separated from her children and forced to take a governess's job. When she's caught stealing, the judge shows no mercy.

Surviving - just - an appalling voyage, the two arrive just after Christmas into the blinding sun of the strange new island: Van Dieman's Land. Here they are sent to work in a nursery, where women of ill-repute give birth before being sent for correction. The nursery is run by a corrupt, debauched Reverend and his idealistic son, who soon takes a fancy to Miriam. But Rose, her best friend and close confidant, watches jealously and makes plans to reverse their fortunes.

The Night Flower takes the reader on a thrilling Dickensian adventure through the dark side of our penal history to a Tasmanian frontier town where anything could happen and morality is made by monsters.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Two girls are brought together under the worst of circumstances: a prison ship taking them from London to 'parts beyond the sea'.

Miriam is a Romany girl drawn from freedom in the hills of the North-West to the city to eke a living playing her tin-whistle in a place where her people are despised. When her mother dies - from cholera, the 'gypsy disease' - she's caught breaking-and-entering and sentenced to transportation.

Rose has been brought up to expect more, but when her husband dies and her father is sent down for illegal slave-trading, she's separated from her children and forced to take a governess's job. When she's caught stealing, the judge shows no mercy.

Surviving - just - an appalling voyage, the two arrive just after Christmas into the blinding sun of the strange new island: Van Dieman's Land. Here they are sent to work in a nursery, where women of ill-repute give birth before being sent for correction. The nursery is run by a corrupt, debauched Reverend and his idealistic son, who soon takes a fancy to Miriam. But Rose, her best friend and close confidant, watches jealously and makes plans to reverse their fortunes.

The Night Flower takes the reader on a thrilling Dickensian adventure through the dark side of our penal history to a Tasmanian frontier town where anything could happen and morality is made by monsters.

More books from Profile

Cover of the book The Aquatic Ape Hypothesis by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book War Damage by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book In the Bonesetter's Waiting Room by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book The Bombay Marines by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Marathon by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book The Good Plain Cook by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book More Brilliant Answers by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Mad About the Dog by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book The Art and Science of Clicker Training for Horses by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Paraphernalia by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Seconds Out by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book The Summer House by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Pocket World in Figures 2017 by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book 1864 by Sarah Stovell
Cover of the book Nagasaki by Sarah Stovell
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy