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  • Published: 2 January 2013
  • ISBN: 9780241962756
  • Imprint: Penguin General UK
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 400
  • RRP: $26.00

The Midwife's Daughter





A deeply moving tale, set in a small Cornish village just before the First World War, about two sisters and the young black orphan who changes their lives

There was no escaping change at the beginning of the twentieth century, not even in Cornwall . . .

Violet Dimond, the Holy Terror, has delivered many of Silkhampton's children - and often their children - in her capacity as handywoman. But Violet's calling is dying out as, with medicine's advances, the good old ways are no longer good enough.

Grace, Violet's adopted daughter, is a symbol of change herself. In the place where she has grown up and everyone knows her, she is accepted, though most of the locals never before saw a girl with skin that colour. For Violet and Grace the coming war will bring more upheaval into their lives: can they endure it, or will they, like so many, be swept aside by history's tide?

A moving tale of prejudice, struggle, love, tragedy, bravery and the changing lives of women in the twentieth century, The Midwife's Daughter grips the reader all the way to its heartstopping conclusion.

  • Published: 2 January 2013
  • ISBN: 9780241962756
  • Imprint: Penguin General UK
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 400
  • RRP: $26.00

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Praise for The Midwife's Daughter

The Midwife's Daughter is warm and wise, heart- breakingly sad and yet somehow uplifting too.I've been a big fan of Patricia Ferguson for many years - and I think this is her finest novel yet.

Jacqueline Wilson

A masterfully detailed, compassionate and enthralling story, rich in surprising revelations and beautifully plotted.

Miranda Seymour

She is precisely the kind of writer whose novels you'd expect to find advertised on tube billboards and selling in the hundred thousands - plotty, emollient, fluent, concerned with relationships and what fosters or thwarts them, and capable of making you root for the characters

Guardian

Strong, affecting, vividly depicted . . . It is a pure pleasure to read

Lionel Shriver, Telegraph

One of the most brilliant novelists around . . . funny, gripping, wonderfully shrewd

Amanda Craig

Moving seamlessly between characters, she shines light on barely-conscious thoughts and feelings to great, often ironic effect . . . a sympathetic, psychologically acute and thoroughly involving tale

Daily Mail

Hugely enjoyable, classic storytelling

Red

Ferguson should be better known . . . she draws on years of experience working as a nurse and midwife to produce acute, skilful descriptions

FT