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Fallen Grace

by Mary Hooper

The Unwin family epitomise Victorian respectability: George Unwin owns London's largest undertaker and his cousin, Sylvester, monopolises the supply of fashionable mourning clothes.

 

Grace, on the other hand, is desperately poor, struggling to support her sister and evade the workhouse – she has also had an illegitimate child.

 

But when Grace becomes an Unwin employee she discovers that dark secrets fester beneath their respectable veneer: the Unwins have already blighted her life – and are scheming to do so again.

Don’t be deterred by this morbid-sounding synopsis! Brimming with fascinating insights into the Victorian obsession with bereavement, and shocking details of a society divided by extremes of wealth and poverty, indomitable, determined Grace is an wonderfully likeable heroine in this absorbing historical cliffhanger.

 

Publisher: Bloomsbury Children's Books
  • Mary Hooper

    Mary Hooper has been writing professionally for over 20 years. She started by writing short stories and serials for teenage and women's magazines when her children were small. Having done a few hundred, and thinking it would be good to see something more permanent on the shelves, she wrote and had published 15 teenage novels. Following this, she wrote another 15 novels or so for younger readers, all humorous. She is perhaps best known for her historical fiction, which captures the atmosphere of the past perfectly and mixes it with romance and adventure. At The Sign of the Sugared Plum was her first historical novel for Bloomsbury. She has since written seven more including Fallen Grace. Mary left school at 15 with no qualifications. She worked as a secretary for some years, then got married and had two children. She took an English degree at Reading University as a mature student and graduated in 1990. She now divides her time between writing more serious books for teenagers and funny stuff for ages seven to twelve.

     

    Visit Mary's website

     

    http://www.maryhooper.co.uk/
    Mary Hooper Photo: Bloomsbury
    Mary Hooper Photo: Bloomsbury

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