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The Daughter's Garden: A completely gripping historical page-turner
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The Daughter's Garden: A completely gripping historical page-turner
Current price: $10.99


Barnes and Noble
The Daughter's Garden: A completely gripping historical page-turner
Current price: $10.99
Size: OS
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"I had to free it," Eleanor said, and stretched her hand out to the blue butterfly that seemed almost to hover in the air. "I had to let something find what happiness it could, since we cannot."
England, 1918:
As war ends, across the world, people are trying to heal and recover. But
Eleanor
still feels broken. The loss of her beloved brother, killed just days before the Armistice was signed, feels impossibly unjust. Spending her time in the neglected gardens behind their house, she fears her heart will never recover.
Then her father hires a man to help restore the garden to its former glory. Gruff, handsome Yorkshireman
Jack
comes from a totally different world to Eleanor, but he understands the nature of her grief more than anyone else seems to. And as they spend time together, even though she knows her family will never accept someone of Jack's class, Eleanor starts to wonder if - like the butterflies around them - there is any way for her to learn to soar again...
Now:
Nearly one hundred years later,
Marin
is not prepared for finding herself the guardian of her fifteen-year-old half-sister
Rebecca
, after her father and his second wife are killed in a tragic accident. The sisters are practically strangers, and Rebecca's grief makes her seem even more distant. Marin too is in need of a fresh start, so when Rebecca begs her to let them move to the picturesque village of Goswell on the Cumbrian coast, Marin impulsively agrees.
But it is only when they find a locked door to a secret garden, and a photograph of a girl with a butterfly alighting on her hand, that the sisters start to realise they have a mystery to solve, one about war, about secrets, and about a love that could never be. A mystery that might just bring them together...
The Daughter's Garden
is a totally unputdownable novel about tragic secrets, the chance for forgiveness, and the healing that can come from a new start. Perfect for fans of Fiona Valpy, Rhys Bowen and Lucinda Riley.
This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.
Previously published as
The Lost Garden
by Katharine Swartz.
Readers love Kate Hewitt:
"
WOW!!!!
... Clear your schedules and grab the tissues as you will need them!!!...
It had me in tears by the end and I do not cry easily!!!
... An
absolutely unputdownable, addictive and compelling devastatingly beautiful heartbreaking book!!!
I LOVED it!"
Bookworm86
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
England, 1918:
As war ends, across the world, people are trying to heal and recover. But
Eleanor
still feels broken. The loss of her beloved brother, killed just days before the Armistice was signed, feels impossibly unjust. Spending her time in the neglected gardens behind their house, she fears her heart will never recover.
Then her father hires a man to help restore the garden to its former glory. Gruff, handsome Yorkshireman
Jack
comes from a totally different world to Eleanor, but he understands the nature of her grief more than anyone else seems to. And as they spend time together, even though she knows her family will never accept someone of Jack's class, Eleanor starts to wonder if - like the butterflies around them - there is any way for her to learn to soar again...
Now:
Nearly one hundred years later,
Marin
is not prepared for finding herself the guardian of her fifteen-year-old half-sister
Rebecca
, after her father and his second wife are killed in a tragic accident. The sisters are practically strangers, and Rebecca's grief makes her seem even more distant. Marin too is in need of a fresh start, so when Rebecca begs her to let them move to the picturesque village of Goswell on the Cumbrian coast, Marin impulsively agrees.
But it is only when they find a locked door to a secret garden, and a photograph of a girl with a butterfly alighting on her hand, that the sisters start to realise they have a mystery to solve, one about war, about secrets, and about a love that could never be. A mystery that might just bring them together...
The Daughter's Garden
is a totally unputdownable novel about tragic secrets, the chance for forgiveness, and the healing that can come from a new start. Perfect for fans of Fiona Valpy, Rhys Bowen and Lucinda Riley.
This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.
Previously published as
The Lost Garden
by Katharine Swartz.
Readers love Kate Hewitt:
"
WOW!!!!
... Clear your schedules and grab the tissues as you will need them!!!...
It had me in tears by the end and I do not cry easily!!!
... An
absolutely unputdownable, addictive and compelling devastatingly beautiful heartbreaking book!!!
I LOVED it!"
Bookworm86
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐