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In 1869, alone, after her father and brother were killed in a shipwreck, 19 year old Maggie Care, walks to the Cornish village of Polsinney, to start a new life.
On a July evening in 1869, Maggie Care arrives footsore and weary in the small Cornish fishing village of Polsinney. Desperate to put behind her a dark and painful tragedy, she finds work and lodgings on the farm of Rachel Tallack, and comfort in the attentions of Rachel's fisherman son, Brice.
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Subjects
Christian, Beliefs, Life, Mary Emily Pearce, Adult, Fiction, Literature, Pentecostal, Family, Families, Fastidious, Dairymaid, Farmland, Farms, Farming, Harbor, Treacherous, Coastline, Coastal, Waters, Seaside, Fishing, Villages, Gossiping, Neighbours Spyglass, Fisher-folk, Fish-cellars, Fish-merchants, Fishmongers, Fishermen, Fleet, Crew, Fish-quay, Lobster-boatsPeople
God.Places
South England, Mew Head, Mindren, Tardrew, Polsinney, PorthgarenTimes
1869Edition | Availability |
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1
Polsinney Harbour
December 1985, Ulverscroft Large Print
Hardcover
- First Large print ed. '85
0708912435 9780708912430
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Book Details
Edition Notes
"Complete and unabridged."
The Physical Object
ID Numbers
Work Description
Pearce's simply sketched characters and neatly tucked plots can often take on a Hardyesque solidity from her empathic reach into period mores and her sparse, evocative landscapes: in this tale, set in a 19th-century Cornish fishing village, there's a warming May/December marriage, passion nobly sublimated to wider loyalties, and a splendidly sacrificial demise.
Maggie Care, 19, dusty and bareheaded, walks down over the moor track to the village of Polsinney, finding a bit of work with sharp-tongued widow Rachel Tallack, whose main source of income is from the sea. Rachel's son Brice is skipper of a fishing boat, still owned, to Rachel's disgust, by her brother-in-law - crippled, dying, bad-tempered Gus Tallack.
Maggie is a good worker, quiet, though willing to tell little, of a father, brother, and fiance drowned at sea. And her secret soon becomes obvious: Maggie is pregnant - so, despite Brice's growing love for her, she's forced to leave the Tallack home.
But, Maggie's rescuer will be the other Tallack man: 52-year-old 'Uncle Gus,' who's been deeply depressed, accepting the death sentence of his "wasting disease," glooming over his lost life as skipper and owner of a sail loft. Pleased to have the pleasure of removing a legacy from Rachel, Gus offers marriage; Maggie accepts - and, as baby Jim is born, the marriage opens up vistas for both. Still, through the years, the long-smoldering love of Brice and Maggie will flare into words - if never deeds. And, before the bittersweet close, there will be tumultuous sea action: wildly tilting decks slithering with nets full of silver fish; a wreck and survival ordeal; and a roaring, pounding finale - as a doomed man brings in a boat through heaving seas, sharp rocks, and shelving sands.
Again, Pearce displays her ability to absorb researched arcana into the story's tempo and ambience without a whiff of library dust; her seascapes are flecked with fresh, salty recognition's. A soothing domestic sampler, framed by fisherman-life excitement.
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April 8, 2020 | Edited by ED Power | About, Pub, this ed |
November 30, 2010 | Edited by Alan Millar | fix title and series |
December 10, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |