The Monk Woman's Daughter bookcover

The Monk Woman's Daughter

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Description

"My mother said she was a nun. That may have been a lie."


So begins the eye-opening and entertaining tale of Vera St. John's chaotic upbringing amid the turbulence of nineteenth-century urban America. Sometimes rollicking and sometimes terrifying, Vera's story features a fascinating array of characters: the troubled woman who bore her, the charming Irishman she marries, the African-American freedman struggling to rescue his wife from slavery, the beautiful high-priced prostitute she befriends, the washerwoman who stands by her in a quixotic quest.


From the squalid streets of 1840s New York to the devastation of post-Civil War Memphis, Vera threads her way through the powerful conflicts of American history to find where she belongs. Along the way, she discovers the nature of power and the true meaning of freedom. The Monk Woman's Daughter was a Distinguished Favorite in the New York City Big Book Awards, and a finalist in the Pacific Northwest Writers Association Nancy Pearl Contest.

Product Details

PublisherSusan Storer Clark
Publish DateNovember 20, 2020
Pages360
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781087902920
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.8 inches | 1.2 pounds

About the Author

Susan Storer Clark reads history and asks questions: Who was Maria Monk? And what happened to her baby daughter? Clark has degrees in history from Rhodes College and King's College London. She had an award-winning career as a radio and TV journalist, mostly in Washington, DC, and now lives near Seattle. She writes about history, historical fiction, and American racism at www.historymuse.us.

Reviews

". . .a brawling, lusty novel about brawling, lusty America in the middle of the nineteenth century. The story will grab you by the lapels and haul you along with the cursed, blessed, resourceful, and fascinating Vera St. John." David O. Stewart, author of Madison's Gift: Five Partnerships That Built America.


". . .this meticulously researched novel brings to life an era when women wore bonnets and steered a narrow course between the roles of wife, widow, maid, and 'parlor girl.'" Solveig Eggerz, author of Sigga of Reykjavik, a novel.


"The Monk Woman's Daughter takes us back to an era when Irish gangs ran whole chunks of Manhattan and pigs rooted in the muddy streets. You'll meet low-lifes and high livers, con men and saints, union leaders and union busters." Frank Joseph, author of To Love Mercy.

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