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The Ragged Heiress
The Ragged Heiress
Oct 2, 2024 12:31 AM

Author:Dilly Court

The Ragged Heiress

A classic story from the No. 1 **Sunday Times bestseller** Dilly Court.

London, 1874

When Lucetta Froy awakes in a hospital bed, she remembers nothing of the events that brought her to her present state.

She is taken home by two rough-speaking individuals who claim to be her brothers. However, as her health improves and her memory returns, she realises she has been kidnapped...

The men hope to claim Lucetta's fortune as a ransom, for she is the daughter of a prosperous importer whose ship went down at sea. Her parents tragically drowned, but Lucetta survived.

Abandoned and destitute, it seems as though the world is against her. But Lucetta's spirit will never be broken, and so she sets out to reclaim what is rightfully hers.

Reviews

If you enjoy Dilly Court's stories, you'll love the latest heart-warming romance from Emma Hornby.

—— Yours

Authentic, compelling . . . another winner for a northern author who has her home county written right across her heart.

—— Lancashire Evening Post on A Daughter's War

Praise for Emma Hornby:

—— -

'Compelling. A gripping and powerful tale of vengeance and reprisal'

—— Val Wood, author of Children of Fortune

'Emma Hornby writes strong, working-class women with heart and humour. The book is an absolute joy'

—— Glenda Young, author of The Miner's Lass

'I loved the twists and turns. The emotional pull on my heartstrings was exquisite. Emma Hornby is a natural storyteller who always delivers and, from the first words to the last, my attention was captured. Read this story at your leisure, read it on the bus or on the train, in your lounge or in your bed - but you must read it. Storytelling at its best'

—— Sheila Riley, author of The Mersey Mistress

'Edge of your seat drama, a book not to be missed!'

—— Lindsey Hutchinson, author of The Hat Girl from Silver Street

'A moving picture of an abused mother's love for her family, beautifully written and enthralling from the very first word'

—— Gracie Hart, author of The Baker's Girl

Remarkable dialectics of loneliness and desire, of love and manipulation, that Paul handles with patient - even disarming - frankness... Alongside the imaginative biography of John, and alongside the dated journal entries, the book is also a foray into Paul's past. The effect is one of a dreamscape, a mesh of past and present, as the borders between the two female artists soften and start to give.

—— Victoria Baena , Baffler

Celia Paul, in both her painting and her writing, is a formidable guardian of her own inner life, as well as a careful chronicler of what it means to traverse a boundary that is barely perceptible, hardly there at all, and yet is the place where truth emerges, hangs in the balance, is not quite distinguishable from a lie. Letters to Gwen John...is a profound act of truth-telling made possible by the thrilling risk of tarrying at that contested border. Paul's writing is a kind of ritual, as well as a pilgrimage, in which she leads us into those hidden places where understanding is beside the point, and invites us simply to dwell with her and whomever else she summons.

—— Artforum , Jack Hanson

A loving and inquiring text, a lyrical correspondence between two women filtered through the inner life of one. It is also an intimate cataloguing of how loneliness and desire transmute to artistic awakening.

—— Makenna Goodman , Astra

Hatherley's urban perambulations are in the great tradition of some of the best writers on architecture and design... Over 600 pages, our author and guide present us with a very personal selection, seeking out the diamonds in the rough and finding just the right pithy observations to praise the unusual, while damning the neglect, philistinism, and opposition that often comes with the territory

—— Jonathan Bell , Wallpaper*

A gorgeous treat... Hatherley is a flâneur with a cause. He incites his readers to engage, as he does, with what is
around them, no matter how banal it may appear at first glance, and to take nothing for granted

—— Jonathan Meades , Literary Review

An intimate perspective on one of the world's greatest institutions. But All the Beauty in the World is about much more: the strange human impulse to make art, the mystery of experiencing art, and what role art can play in our lives. What a gift

—— Rumaan Alam, author of Leave the World Behind

This book will change your experience of museums, connecting you with the stories of those who make them possible and revealing the layers of wonder that gather in the quiet halls where art meets modern life. Bringley's keen, warm-hearted dispatches remind us - as art itself should - of our common humanity

—— Mark Vanhoenacker, author of Imagine a City

Intimate and fascinating

—— Town and Country

Perhaps most importantly, though, All the Beauty in the World is a story about grief and about beauty, and about how inextricably the two are linked

—— Vox

Nails the very particular thing of spending your days in galleries, and how close you grow to the works and the people that come to see them

—— Nicholas Cullinan, director of the National Portrait Gallery, Elle Decoration

Illuminating and transformative

—— Kerry James Marshall, Artist

A profound homage to the marvels of a world-class museum and a radiant chronicle of grief, perception, and a renewed embrace of life

—— Booklist

Prepare to be wooed by this memoir, which doubles as a loving memoir of the Met from one of its most inside insiders: Patrick Bringliey, who worked at the museum as a guard for a decade.

—— LitHub

A beautiful tale about beauty. It is also a tale about grief, balancing solitude and comradeship, and finding joy in both the exalted and the mundane

—— Washington Post

Bringley's memoir abounds with small details ... but it also has grander subjects to address - namely, solitude, the staying power of art, and grief. ... In the end, All the Beauty in the World is an empathetic chronicle of one museum, the works collected there and the people who keep it running - all recounted by an especially patient observer

—— New York Times Book Review

Simply wonderful. This funny, moving, beautifully written book takes the reader on a journey that unfolds as epiphanies. It is a testament to the capacity of art to illuminate life

—— Keith Christiansen, Curator Emeritus, the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Few know the secrets of the Metropolitan Museum of Art like the guards who roam its two million square feet treasure, keeping an eye on its treasures. For a decade, Patrick Bringley was one of them, and in this moving memoir, he recounts bonding with his colleagues and marveling at the beautiful works of art he is entrusted to protect

—— New York Post

A unique workplace memoir that tells the tale of the museum and the people who keep it running

—— Book Riot

As rich in moving insights as the Met is in treasures, All the Beauty in the World reminds us of the importance of learning not about art, but from it. This is art appreciation at a profound level

—— NPR

An empathetic chronicle of one museum, the works collected there and the people who keep it running - all recounted by an especially patient observer

—— The New York Times Book Review

A profound homage to the marvels of a world-class museum and a radiant chronicle of grief, perception, and a renewed embrace of life

—— Bookpage

Hessel's beautifully written 500-year survey is a welcome, necessary, addition to the bookshelves

—— Claire Armitstead , Guardian

Highly readable and lavishly illustrated... a rich storehouse of groundbreaking female art

—— Liz Hodgkinson , The Lady

Astonishing

—— Bella Mackie

This book changes everything. As soon as you open it, it's like you've opened a box of lit fireworks - out soars great artist after great artist. Her retake on the canon has changed it forever

—— Ali Smith , Observer

Hessel possesses that rare quality of a public intellectual, whereby she can distill vast amounts of knowledge and history into something accessible, relevant and joyful

—— Pandora Sykes

Extraordinary

—— L.A. Times

Honest, wholesome entertainment

—— Daily Mail

Utterly addictive

—— Glamour

Exquisite writing and a story enriched by the power of abiding love

—— USA Today

Full of romance, drama and snappy dialogue

—— People

Eminently readable and richly imagined

—— Publisher's Weekly

Hilarious and romantic. I couldn't put it down

—— Sarah Jessica Parker
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