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When the winter ice melted in April 1850, residents of Saco, Maine, made a gruesome discovery: the body of a young girl submerged in a stream. She was identified as a Canadian mill worker named Berengera Caswell. This work features two accounts of her death, both fictional, and an introduction that places these accounts in a historical context.

Produktbeschreibung
When the winter ice melted in April 1850, residents of Saco, Maine, made a gruesome discovery: the body of a young girl submerged in a stream. She was identified as a Canadian mill worker named Berengera Caswell. This work features two accounts of her death, both fictional, and an introduction that places these accounts in a historical context.
Autorenporträt
Elizabeth A. De Wolfe is associate professor of history at the University of New England in Biddeford, Maine. She is coeditor (with Thomas S. Edwards) of Such News of the Land: U.S. Women Nature Writers (2001) and the author of Shaking the Faith: Women, Family and Mary Marshall Dyer's Anti-Shaker Campaign, 1815-1867 (2002), which received the 2003 Outstanding Publication Award from the Communal Studies Association.