000 02121nam a22002057a 4500
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020 _a978-0330-44960-1
040 _cPCCR Library
082 _aFic M88 2008
100 _aMorton, Kate
245 _aThe Forgotten garden /
_cKate Morton
260 _aLondon :
_bPan Books,
_c2008
300 _a645 pages;
_c20 cm.
520 _aIn 1913, a small girl (about 4 years old) arrives on a ship to Australia. She’s alone, with nothing but a small white suitcase containing a beautiful book of fairy tales. She cannot remember her name or where she came from, and she has been entrusted to someone called “the Authoress” who had promised to look after her—but that person disappears without a trace. The dockmaster and his wife in Maryborough, Queensland, take the girl in, raise her as their own daughter, and name her Nell O’Connor. On Nell’s 21st birthday, her adoptive father tells her the truth: she is not their biological child. This revelation shatters her worldview and sense of identity. Years later, after her father dies, Nell receives the small suitcase again as an inheritance. Inside is the fairy tale book, written by someone named Eliza Makepeace, who had once been known as “the Authoress.” Nell becomes determined to trace her origins—her parents, who she really is—and the mysterious link to Eliza. Her search leads her to Cornwall in England, particularly to a place called Blackhurst Manor and Cliff Cottage, which used to belong to Eliza. In 2005, after Nell’s death, her granddaughter Cassandra O’Connor inherits Cliff Cottage and the estate garden, known locally as “the forgotten garden.” Cassandra, who has her own emotional scars/tragedies (loss in her life), takes up the quest to finish what Nell began. She tries to piece together the clues: the fairy tale book, old letters, local history, and the myths or hidden histories around Blackhurst Manor.
650 _aIdentity and belonging
_xFiction
650 _aLoss and memory
_xFiction
942 _2ddc
_cBK
_n0
999 _c6536
_d6536