Bookbot

Belinda Starling

    L'œuvre littéraire de Belinda Starling se caractérise par une profonde perspicacité de la psyché humaine et un style captivant. Son écriture aborde souvent des relations interpersonnelles complexes et les paysages émotionnels de l'expérience humaine. L'auteure a magistralement saisi les subtiles nuances des sentiments et des pensées des personnages, entraînant les lecteurs dans leurs mondes. Son approche unique de la narration et sa capacité à évoquer de fortes émotions ont laissé une marque indélébile dans la littérature.

    The Journal of Dora Damage
    • The Journal of Dora Damage

      • 464pages
      • 17 heures de lecture

      Lambeth, London, 1859. By the time Dora Damage discovers that there is something wrong with her husband, Peter, it is too late. His arthritic hands are crippled, putting his book-binding business into huge debt and his family in danger of entering the poorhouse. Summoning her courage, Dora proves that she is more than just a housewife and mother. Taking to the streets, she resolves to rescue her family at any price-and finds herself lured into illegally binding expensive volumes of pornography commissioned by aristocrats. Then, when a mysterious fugitive slave arrives at her door, Dora realises she's entangled in a web of sex, money, deceit and the law. Now the very family she fought so hard for is under threat from a host of new, more dangerous foes. Belinda Starling's debut novel is a startling vision of Victorian London, juxtaposing its filth and poverty with its affluence. In Dora Damage we meet a daring young heroine, struggling in a very modern way against the constraints of the day, and whose resourcefulness and bravery has us rooting for her all the way.

      The Journal of Dora Damage
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