Fotografía de autor

Caroline Lea

Autor de The Glass Woman

4 Obras 417 Miembros 20 Reseñas

Obras de Caroline Lea

The Glass Woman (2019) 301 copias
The Metal Heart (2021) 50 copias
Prize Women (2023) 35 copias
When the Sky Fell Apart (2016) 31 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
United Kingdom
Lugar de nacimiento
Jersey, Channel Islands
Lugares de residencia
Warwick, UK
Biografía breve
Caroline Lea was born and raised in Jersey. She gained a First in English Literature and Creative Writing from Warwick University and has had poetry published in The Phoenix Anthology and An Aston Anthology, which she also co-edited. When the Sky Fell Apart is her first novel

Miembros

Reseñas

We're in 17th century Iceland, and can feel its chill, its landscape, its folk and religious history in the pages of this story. Young Rósa rather precipitately marries Jón, a leader in a distant village, to ensure her ailing widowed mother some security. Here she is deliberately isolated by her controlling husband, who is a widower. No spoiler alerts here, but tensions rise as her isolation increases, and as her childhood sweetheart appears on the scene. A cleverly written novel, in which Rósa's unease, and her increasing inability to keep a grasp on what is real, and what the product of a fevered and frightened imagination keeps the reader guessing.… (más)
 
Denunciada
Margaret09 | 12 reseñas más. | Apr 15, 2024 |
This novel is based on a shocking untold story when, in 1926, women were asked to bear children to earn a fortune. Lily di Marco and Mae Thebault used to be inseparable. They lived under the same roof and cared for each other's children. But then the Great Depression hits, changing everything. Both women will be forced to make impossible decisions to save themselves - and their families - from ruin.

At the start of this story, Lily lives with a very abusive husband. But he dies early on during an earthquake and Lily is free to start a new life. I was glad as I didn’t really want to read about another abused wife. Although some things went well for her for awhile, it didn’t last. Same with Mae. Many difficulties and struggles occurred. This story was well-told but it was sad and depressing until the very ending. It wasn’t what I expected and didn’t enjoy it but did think the writing was good.… (más)
 
Denunciada
gaylebutz | 2 reseñas más. | Feb 22, 2024 |
This was enjoyable fiction set in 1600s Iceland that follows the life of a young woman who is love with her childhood sweetheart, but marries a well-off stranger to provide for her mother. She moves away to his village and finds that her fears about this man and her situation were well-founded. Typical themes of burgeoning Christianity vs. the old folk tales, the powerlessness of women in those times, the dangers of gossip, etc. It was entertaining but nothing special.
 
Denunciada
japaul22 | 12 reseñas más. | Nov 5, 2023 |
Upon his death in 1926, the will of Canadian lawyer, financier, and practical joker, Charles Vance Miller bequeathed the residue of his substantial estate to ‘the woman who could produce the most children within the next ten years’. Caroline Lea draws inspiration from what became known as The Great Stork Derby in her historical novel, Prize Women.

When an earthquake hits Chatsworth, New Brunswick, and it appears her abusive husband has been killed, Lily de Marco uses the opportunity to flee with her young son. Matteo. Arriving in Toronto, broke and homeless, Lily is fortuitously introduced to Mae Thebault, the wife of a wealthy steel factory owner, who agrees to let Lily stay with them in return for helping to take care of the Thebaults’ five children. Despite their differences in background and social status, Lily and Mae quickly become close friends but after the Wall Street Crash and the onset of the Great Depression, the two women unexpectedly find themselves rivals.

Exploring the lack of agency women too often had over their lives, particularly once tied to marriage and motherhood, the impact of the economic collapse, the desperation of poverty, as well as abuse, friendship, prejudice and racism, Prize Women paints a rich portrait of Canada’s social history over the 1920/30’s. The Author’s Note explains where Lea has diverged from historical accuracy for narrative purposes.

Curiosity about The Great Stork Derby is what drew me to this novel, and Lea explores its impact thoughtfully. With large family’s not exactly uncommon at the time, given the lack of contraception, I was surprised to learn the ‘baby race’ had only 11 entrants. Accounts suggest that most of them would have had large families even without the incentive of the competition, but I hadn’t given much thought to motive, or what ‘losing’ the ‘baby race’ might mean to participants.

The characters of Lily and Mae are loosely based on two of the real Derby competitors, and to them the money is of vital importance, though for very different reasons. Lea is sensitive to the women’s desires and hardships and portrays them with nuance. Lily is probably the more sympathetic of two, but Mae’s experience is also affecting. At the mercy of mens decisions in private and in public, both are afforded so little control over their lives it’s infuriating.

I found the pacing lagged a bit later in the story, in part I think because Prize Women is often quite bleak which weighs the narrative down, though the end brings light and hope. A moving and interesting novel.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
shelleyraec | 2 reseñas más. | May 15, 2023 |

Listas

Premios

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Heiða Reed Narrator

Estadísticas

Obras
4
Miembros
417
Popularidad
#58,443
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
20
ISBNs
45
Idiomas
2

Tablas y Gráficos