Tregaron's Daughter
Books | Fiction / General
4
Madeleine Brent
Set in Cornwall at the turn of the twentieth-century, Madeleine Brent's first novel follows the fortunes of Cadi Tregaron, a sixteen year-old fisherman's daughter. Happy in the small community of the coastal village where she has spent her life, the only hint of disquiet has been a recurring dream - of a great house standing in water and of a faceless man who awaits her there - a dream which is sometimes wonderful and sometimes terrifying. By a cruel blow Cadi is left alone in the world, but she is taken into a wealthy family where she lives like a lady with servants to wait upon her and is treated as one of the family. Too self-reliant to be spoilt by this change in her fortunes, she is perhaps too self-reliant for her own good, for at Meadhaven she finds mystery, danger and a hidden enemy. Is it the wayward young Richard Morton? Or the grey-eyed stranger who is forever watching her? Or is it Lucian Farrel, her benefactor's maverick nephew, whose face now becomes the one to haunt her dream. But the dream turns to nightmare, for she finds that the house standing in water is a reality and that she is bound to it by a freak of ancestry. Here, in the house of her dream and far from her own country, Cadi comes to know heartbreak and grief, and learns the frightening truth about herself and the hidden enemy who threatens her life.
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More Details:
Author
Madeleine Brent
Pages
350
Publisher
Souvenir Press Limited
Published Date
2013
ISBN
0285642197 9780285642195
Community ReviewsSee all
"A historical novel about a woman who lives a quiet life in Cornwall with her fisherman father, until a series of strangers and events lead her to Venice and a possible inheritance. 1971.<br/><br/>Full review at <a href="http://anotherlookbook.com/tregarons-daughter-madeleine-brent/">Another look book</a><br/><br/>Another winner from Madeleine Brent. I didn't love it quite as much as I ADORED Golden Urchin, but it was still very much worth reading. Once again, Brent has also written a female protagonist who is so strong and capable, without falling back on that haughty, arrogant personality type we often find in historical fiction featuring strong women. I get so tired of those beautiful, unkind heroines! <i>Tregaron's Daughter</i> also maintains a nice balance between historical fiction, romance, and a splash of Gothic to top it all off. Also, I read it while in Venice, and about half of the story takes place in Venice! That was a cool tie-in. (And intentional.)"
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Bree Sarlati