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The Silent Lady
The Silent Lady
Sep 22, 2024 3:22 PM

Author:Catherine Cookson

The Silent Lady

The woman who presented herself at the offices of the respectable firm of London solicitors was, the receptionist decided, clearly a vagrant who had been sleeping on the streets. The clothes that hung on her frail body were filthy, and she seemed unable to speak. When she asked to see the firm's senior partner, Alexander Armstrong, she was at first shown the door - but when Mr Armstrong learned the name of his visitor, all the office staff were amazed at his reaction. For Irene Baindor was a woman with a past, and her emergence from obscurity was to signal the unravelling of a mystery that had baffled the lawyer for twenty-six years.

What Irene - the silent lady of the title - had been doing, and where she had been, gradually emerged over the following weeks as Armstrong met the unlikely benefactors who had befriended her and helped her to build a useful and satisfying life in a sheltered environment. Now, at last, she was able to confront her tortured and violent past and find great happiness and contentment with the help of old friends and some newer ones.

Reviews

It's 1930, and Secrets tells the tale of one girl caught in family mystery, a struggle against cruelty, and a quest for love . . .

—— from the publisher's description

With characters it is impossible not to care about, this is storytelling at its very best

—— Daily Mail

An emotional and moving epic you won't forget in a hurry

—— Woman’s Weekly

Combines dazzling erudition with assured narrative skills to offer glimpses of some of history's darkest corners, and stark and timely challenges to the very notions of civilisation and progress

—— Independent on Sunday

A dazzling hall of mirrors... Ferociously ambitious... Illumined by a fizzing passion for the recondite

—— Daily Telegraph

An astonishingly assured début, funny and serious ... I was delighted

—— Salman Rushdie

She is . . . a George Eliot of multi-culturalism

—— Daily Telegraph

[Zadie Smith] is one of the prominent voices of her generation

—— Sunday Times

Britain's finest young author

—— The List

[Zadie Smith] packs more intelligence, humour and sheer energy into any given scene than anyone else of her generation

—— Sunday Telegraph

[White Teeth] established a model for how to make sense-and art-out of the complexity, diversity and pluck that have defined the beginning of this century

—— Time

The first publishing sensation of the millennium

—— Observer

White Teeth reflects a new generation

—— Guardian

[Zadie Smith] is one of the prominent voices of her generation

—— Sunday Times
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