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Sally Gunning

Author of The Widow's War

16+ Works 1,787 Members 113 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: via Goodreads

Series

Works by Sally Gunning

The Widow's War (2006) 572 copies
Bound (2008) 292 copies
The Rebellion of Jane Clarke (2010) 232 copies
Benjamin Franklin's Bastard (2013) 167 copies
Dirty Water (1998) 56 copies
Painting the Light: A Novel (2021) 51 copies
Hot Water (1990) 49 copies
Ice Water (1993) 45 copies
Troubled Water (1993) 35 copies
Rough Water (1994) 34 copies
Under Water (1992) 32 copies
Fire Water (1999) 30 copies
Muddy Water (1997) 30 copies
Deep Water (1996) 27 copies
Still Water (1995) 25 copies

Associated Works

The Night Awakens (2000) — Contributor — 114 copies
Murder, They Wrote (1997) — Contributor — 51 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

FInely tuned phrasing and interesting characters. How curious that Franklin's son, sired a child out of wedlock and essentially followed in his father's footsteps. Great idea this author had, to take well known characters and explore this aspect.
 
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kwskultety | 8 other reviews | Jul 4, 2023 |
An excellent story, well told.
 
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gbelik | 2 other reviews | Jan 16, 2023 |
Very good historical fiction. Kept my interest from the very first page and I could not put it down. At the end of the book the author explains the details of his research and how mnuch of the book was fact and how much was fiction. Also goes into detail about the final years of Benjamin Franklin after the book finishes.
 
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Jen-Lynn | 8 other reviews | Aug 1, 2022 |
Gratifying read!

I was somewhat tentative about Ida Pease’s story at the start. By the time I reached the last page I was utterly enthralled, at moments aghast, although rarely relieved.
Set in Martha’s Vineyard in the early twentieth century, Ida is a gifted portrait painter who before her forlorn marriage had gained a place at the Museum of Fine Arts School, Boston. Ida’s painting time slides away after she marries Ezra. During her marriage she’s devolved into a much put upon wife, a sheep farmer and unpaid worker, an unappreciated daughter-in-law, and finally a widow. Widowhood brings about both ownership rights problems and economic struggles. Ida discovers the scam artist her dead husband was. Her mother-in-law is a rigid tyrant. Idea grows into herself, a woman who seeks to find her voice in a society against women’s rights, and a cyclist—a gift bringing newly appreciated freedom, which includes a repositioned passion for painting.
As Ida slowly uncovers the degree of deceptiveness practised by her husband and his partner Mose Barstow, she comes into contact with Mose’s brother Henry. They work on unravelling both estates. Again more shocks! It’s Henry who introduces Ida to bicycles. Despite his assistance it’s up to Ida to make her own way as she wades through a mountain of deception, of opportunity and rejection.
Ida swirls. She’s coherent and incoherent. Sure of herself and then awkward. Too willing to appease others, scared to trust herself and closed off. Watching Ida grow is both exhausting and exhilarating. Her struggles giveaway to self awareness and renewed directions. There’s pathos and lost moments, alongside enlightening and delightful vignettes. A surprisingly satisfying dénouement.

A William Morrow and Custom House ARC via NetGalley
… (more)
 
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eyes.2c | 2 other reviews | Dec 12, 2021 |

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Statistics

Works
16
Also by
3
Members
1,787
Popularity
#14,407
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
113
ISBNs
50
Favorited
1

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