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Whispers Across a Sea is a sweeping novel that follows three generations of the Anglo-Irish Young family in Victorian Ireland, where Irish desire for independence from Britain is building. How will the family evolve in the ever-changing social and political landscape of the country they call home? In 1920, Ireland stands on the brink of civil war. Lucie returns to her familial home to settle the estate, where she uncovers an abundance of handwritten letters-a lifetime's worth of cherished memories and guarded secrets between her mother and aunts-as well as her grandfather's diary. As she reads…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Whispers Across a Sea is a sweeping novel that follows three generations of the Anglo-Irish Young family in Victorian Ireland, where Irish desire for independence from Britain is building. How will the family evolve in the ever-changing social and political landscape of the country they call home? In 1920, Ireland stands on the brink of civil war. Lucie returns to her familial home to settle the estate, where she uncovers an abundance of handwritten letters-a lifetime's worth of cherished memories and guarded secrets between her mother and aunts-as well as her grandfather's diary. As she reads through her findings, Lucie begins to wonder just how well she knew her relatives and the circumstances of their lives. Norah, a close childhood friend and the daughter of a former family servant, helps her work through the notes, and their conversations remind Lucie that she and Norah live in very different worlds. Norah is Irish; Lucie is Anglo-Irish. As the two women look into the past, it becomes evident that Norah has always known more about Lucie's life than Lucie has ever understood of Norah's. And Lucie realizes that she has been unaware of the disquiet in Ireland's streets-but then again, the elder members of her family, so completely involved in their own lives, didn't appear to notice either. . . . Whispers Across a Sea is a compelling novel that traces three generations of Lucie's Anglo-Irish family as they navigate the nuances of life in their adopted country of Ireland. Within the home, the family's Irish servants make sure the lives of the Youngs remain comfortable while silently observing their employers' detachment from the realities of life in Ireland-a country where a lengthy, violent, and divisive struggle is beginning. How long will the Youngs be able to close their eyes to the shifting world outside their door? Based on a true story, Christina Holloway's carefully researched and vividly imagined historical novel opens a window into Ireland in the late 1800s-a time of vast privilege, inequality, turmoil, and change.
Autorenporträt
Christina Holloway is a leader in environmental education and land conservation in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her passion for environmental activism began in April 1970, when she pushed her four-month-old son in a stroller in the first ever Earth Day march. Christina resides on the Stanford campus with her husband, a retired professor and founder of the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at the Graduate School of Business. They have three children and seven grandchildren.