Book Of Colours
Cadwallader, Robyn
Sold by SecondSale, Montgomery, IL, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since December 20, 2007
Used - Soft cover
Condition: Used - Good
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by SecondSale, Montgomery, IL, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since December 20, 2007
Condition: Used - Good
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketItem in good condition. Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc.
Seller Inventory # 00086216507
"Robyn Cadwallader fashions words with the same delicate, colourful intensity that her 14th-century illuminators brought to their illustrated manuscripts." SARAH DUNANT
From the author of the internationally acclaimed novel The Anchoress - hailed by the New York Times Book Review as "finely drawn... a considerable achievement"-comes a profound and moving historical novel about the importance of creativity and the power of connection".
In London, 1321, at a time of political upheaval, three people are drawn together in a small shop in Paternoster Row around the creation of a magnificent book, an illuminated manuscript of prayers. The book has been commissioned by a wealthy noblewoman, Lady Mathilda Fitzjohn, as a status symbol to showcase her family's improving station.
John Dancaster begins work on the manuscript along with his wife Gemma, a talented illuminator in her own right, although she must hide her skill as the guild forbids women. Into their lives walks the mysterious Will Asshe, a gifted artist, but a man hiding a shadowy past.
As the baronial revolt increases tensions within London and Lady Mathilda has to grapple with her changing fortunes once her husband rides off to war, completing the book becomes a fraught task. Even though the commission has seemed to answer the aspirations of each of these people, their own desires and ambitions threaten its completion.
In poetic and transportive prose, Cadwallader illuminates the roiling and turbulent world of the early fourteenth century in a compelling story of power, status and the role of women in a forgotten time.
Praise for The Anchoress:
"So beautiful, so rich, so strange, unexpected and thoughtful-also suspenseful. I loved this book." Elizabeth Gilbert, author of City of Girls
"A detailed, sensuous and richly imagined shard of the past." Geraldine Brooks, author of People of the Book
Robyn Cadwallader lives among vineyards in beautiful Ngunnawal country. Her first novel, The Anchoress (2015), was published internationally to critical acclaim. It won a Canberra Critics' Circle Award for fiction and was nominated for the Indie Book Awards, Adelaide Festival Awards, ABIA Awards and ACT Book of the Year Award. Her second novel, Book of Colours (2018), won the 2019 ACT Book of the Year Award, received a Canberra Critics' Circle Award and was shortlisted for the Voss Award. Her reviews, prize-winning short stories and poems have been published in journals in Australia and the USA; her poetry collection, i painted unafraid, was released in 2010. A non-fiction book based on her PhD thesis about virginity and female agency in the Middle Ages was published in 2008. In response to the Australian government's punitive treatment of asylum seekers, she edited a collection of essays on asylum seeker policy, We Are Better Than This (2015).
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