Bound
β Scribed by Sally Gunning
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 160 KB
- Edition
- 1st Harper paperback ed
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
In Gunning's latest colonial page-turner, seven-year-old Alice Cole travels with her family from 1756 London to the New World, dreaming of a big house in Philadelphia and a new life. Her mother and brothers die on board and are buried at sea; the ship docks in Boston rather than Philadelphia; there, her father indentures her for 11 years without a backward glance. Alice does housework for the family of Simeon Morton of Dedham, in whose house she is treated almost like a second daughter, becoming constant companion to 10-year-old Abigail, or Nabby. When Nabby marries Emery Verley of Medfield, Alice's indenture is signed over to him, but the Verley household turns out to be an abusive one. Alice flees and winds up on Satucket, Cape Cod, where Lyddie Berry, heroine of Gunning's The Widow's War , and her companion, the lawyer Eben Freeman, give her shelter and a job. Alice works hard for them, and they grow fond of her, but when Alice discovers she's pregnant, she embarks on a journey of deceit and lies, one that comes to a bitter end. Gunning weaves a horrifying, spellbinding story of colonial indenture's cruelties and a meditation on the meaning of freedom. (Apr.)
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Review
βHistorical fiction at its very bestβ¦Impeccably researched, this story is spellbinding, giving a realistic view of life in 18th-century coastal New England.β (Boston Globe, Pick of the Week, on BOUND )
β[A] suspenseful and engaging look at the New England colonies in the decades immediately preceding the American Revolution. Richly detailed and impeccably researched, the novel . . . grapple[s] with what it means to pursue personal freedom, [and] the eraβs sexual politics and religious and political fervor come alive. The result is moving, compelling, and beautifully wrought; highly recommended for historical fiction collections.β (Library Journal )
βThis book, eloquently written and exhaustively researched, is a warning along the lines of The Handmaidβs Tale, and just as necessary a read.β (Feminist Review on BOUND )
βA well written, thought provoking mid-eighteenth century thriller.β (Midwest Book Review )
β[A] colonial page-turner...horrifying, spellbinding.β (Publishers Weekly )
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