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Books
nominated for the 2001 Award
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Click here for the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors. |
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Book Information |
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The
Dress Lodger by
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ISBN: 0871137534 Atlantic Monthly Press (USA) ISBN: 0340717831 Sceptre (UK) |
Find out more about the author on the following websites:
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ABOUT THE BOOK Sheri Holman's first novel, 'A Stolen Tongue', the story of faith and betrayal along a medieval pilgrimage route, was a national best-seller and was published to international acclaim. In her second novel, Holman delivers a stunning exploration of sinister Industrial England, prostitution, and the dark secrets of nineteenth-century medical science. Reminiscent of 'An Instance of the Fingerpost' by Iain Pears and the works of Caleb Carr, 'The Dress Lodger' is a historical thriller charged with a distinctly modern voice. Fifteen-year-old Gustine is a "dress lodger," a young prostitute who rents a beautiful blue dress from her landlord to attract a higher class of clientele. To make sure she earns her fees and to keep from running off with his fantastical gown, her pimp has set a malevolent old woman, known only as "the Eye," to follow her through the back alleys of Sunderland. By day a potter's assistant, by night a courtesan of the streets, Gustine works to support her fragile only child, born with a remarkable anatomical defect. Surgeon Henry Chiver is a prisoner of his own past. Implicated in the Burke and Hare killings in Edinburgh, in which beggars were murdered so the corpses could be sold to medical schools, he has come to Sunderland to start a new life. He has a loving fiancée, an influential uncle, and an anatomy school that is chronically short of teaching cadavers. Doctor and dress lodger come together in the filthy, overgrown East End of Sunderland. Here, during the worst epidemic since the bubonic plague, Gustine secures bodies for the doctor's school, until Henry's greed and his growing obsession with her child challenge her loyalty to him. With cholera bearing down on the city Gustine must turn to her mortal enemy, the Eye, in her battle for the life and the afterlife of her only child. Ribald and irreverent, heartbreaking and horrifying, The Dress Lodger tells a story of those who were sacrificed so that medicine might advance. Written with an unbridled intellectual energy that will entice you through the last bittersweet pages, The Dress Lodger is a Dickensian tour de force. Sheri Holman grew up in rural Virginia and now lives in Brooklyn, New York. She is the author of a Stolen Tongue, which was published in nine countries.
Here are some readers' thoughts on The Dress Lodger by Sheri Holman. "The novel is set in 19th century poverty stricken Sunderland.
It gives an almost too graphic account of all the worst aspects of low-life,
working class England. Gustine is a young mother of a delicate baby. To provide for her child
she slaves in a pottery by day, and at night, wearing a beautiful blue
dress, which she rents from her landlord, she works as a prostitute. Holman tackles many issues. She deals with the struggle endured by
the medical scientists of the day in the fight against cholera; how
the rich merchant class refused to see the problem in order to safeguard
their own financial interests; and the working class poor who believed
the disease was specially designed to wipe them out. It is not a book that is meant to be read for light-hearted enjoyment, but once read it is not easily forgotten." (Reviewed by a Member of Raheny Library Readers Group.)
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