In contemporary Paris, Nancy Roach is fed up with her flagging dissertation research and flees to the English countryside to escape the mounting pressure from her dissertation advisor. There, she stumbles upon an illustration of "The Parasol Flower" in a 19th century treatise, which draws her into the life of Hannah Inglis, a talented artist who slipped out of art history and into the Malaysian wilderness. Working from Hannah's letters and a cache of paintings, Nancy attempts to reconstruct a pivotal year in Hannah's life. The year is 1896 and Hannah Inglis, a painter, is pushing back against her husband and their circle of ex-patriot friends in British Malaysia, who see her art as an uncivilizing influence. She finds support from two unlikely sources-the intimidating Eva Peterborough, an evolutionary biologist, and the Sikh police sergeant Darshan Singh who assists on treks to paint "en plein air." With their help, she embarks on a search for a rare and legendary specimen-a flower that blooms as big as a lady's parasol. Told in alternating points-of-view, The Parasol Flower tells the parallel stories of two women, centuries apart, as they explore the intersection between feminism, art, and science. Like Elizabeth Gilbert's THE SIGNATURE OF ALL THINGS and Barbara Kingsolver's UNSHELTERED, Karen Quevillon's book, THE PARASOL FLOWER, traces the borders of science, art, race, and class and establishes new boundaries.
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