Rescued by the Rakish Lord
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A forced proximity, high society romance set in the late Georgian era A man of such dubious...
Historical Romance Romantic Adventure
Oscar Wilde Prefigured: Queer Fashioning and British Caricature, 1750-1900
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"I do not say you are it, but you look it, and you pose at it, which is just as bad," Lord...
DK Eyewitness Travel Guide England's South Coast
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Taking you from Kent to Cornwall, this is the only travel guide dedicated to England's South Coast....
Stamford in 50 Buildings: Celebrating 50 Years of a Conservation Town
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Stamford has a reputation for being one of England's finest stone towns. It is a happy mix of...
The Butcher's Hook
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'KNOWS HOW TO KEEP HER AUDIENCE HOOKED' The Times 'A MASTERFUL STORYTELLER' Clare Mackintosh 'DARK,...
The Life of the Virgin: Maximus the Confessor
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Long overlooked by scholars, this seventh-century Life of the Virgin, attributed to Maximus the...
Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough
Charles O'Brien and Nikolaus Pevsner
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Bedfordshire is one of the smallest English counties but encompasses great variety in landscape and...
English Homes and Gardens: Part 3
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This is the third and final part of a 10-volume reprint series of 'English Homes and Gardens',...
ClareR (6250 KP) rated The Foundling in Books
Jan 14, 2020
Bess Bright, a hawker of shrimps on London’s streets, leaves her newborn, Clara, at the London Foundling Hospital with every intention of reclaiming her when she is older. When Bess does return having saved the money to pay for the care her daughter has received over the last six years, it’s to discover that Bess Bright has already claimed her baby the day after she left her. So someone has taken her daughter.
In a much wealthier part of London, a widow is persuaded by her doctor to take on a nursemaid for her daughter. The widow rarely leaves her home, and doesn’t let her daughter play outside. The child’s only time outside is the journey to church at the Foundling Hospital every Sunday. The new nursemaid, along with the doctor, convince the widow that she should allow the child some times outside to play, and some fresh air.
This is just the tip of the iceberg though. The widow is a complex, damaged character who tries to hide from her past - but as secrets have a habit of doing, hers catch up with her. The nursemaid is instrumental in this.
The descriptions in this book are all so vivid - I was transported into the contrasting world of Georgian London and those who lived in poverty living alongside (streets away from) those who lived with unmentionable amounts of money. The oppression in the widows household was overwhelming: claustrophobic, even.
I loved everything about this book - I loved the gothic, suspense-filled atmosphere, and spent a large part of the book with my heart in my mouth!
Another wonderful book by Stacey Halls, and one I’d highly recommend reading!
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole for the reading AND the listening experience (I loved the narrators on the audio book!), and Stacey Halls for reading along, too!
Sentimental Murder: Love and Madness in the Eighteenth Century
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On an April evening in 1779, a woman is shot on the steps of Covent Garden. Her murderer is a young...

