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The Vanishing Point [Paperback]

Mary Sharratt (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (55 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 2, 2006
In the tradition of Philippa Gregory’s smart, transporting fiction comes this tale of dark suspense, love, and betrayal, featuring two star-crossed sisters, one lost and the other searching.

Bright and inquisitive, Hannah Powers was raised by a father who treated her as if she were his son. While her beautiful and reckless sister, May, pushes the limits of propriety in their small English town, Hannah harbors her own secret: their father has given her an education forbidden to women. But Hannah’s secret serves her well when she journeys to colonial Maryland to reunite with May, who has been married off to a distant cousin after her sexual misadventures ruined her marriage prospects in England.

As Hannah searches for May, who has disappeared, she finds herself falling in love with her brother-in-law. Alone in a wild, uncultivated land where the old rules no longer apply, Hannah is freed from the constraints of the society that judged both her and May as dangerous—too smart, too fearless, and too hungry for life. But Hannah is also plagued by doubt, as her quest for answers to May’s fate grows ever more disturbing and tangled.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Sexual tension and foreboding abound in this engaging but clumsy colonial potboiler. Sharrat's novel chronicles the travails of Hannah and May Powers, close English sisters who have been raised by their physician father. May is sent to Maryland in order to be married, but when Hannah arrives in the New World for a visit, she is informed by her brother-in-law that May has died following childbirth. Hannah suspects something sinister, though, and begins searching for the truth even as she becomes romantically entangled with her sister's widower. Sharratt succeeds in keeping the plot unpredictable, even as the characters, prose and dialogue are mired in cliché and awkward syntax ("How came you here?" and "Get you back to the dock" are typical examples of the novel's 17th century-speak). An over-reliance on shifting perspectives and chronological jumps also obstructs the novel's strengths, including interesting, well-researched period detail with an emphasis on food and medicine. These winning passages coexist queasily with sex scenes that seem lifted from lesser romance novels. The plot remains sturdy, however, leading to a conclusion that is well-orchestrated and satisfying.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Though vastly different, sisters May and Hannah Powers have been raised as independent, freethinking women by their physician father. May, a lusty, vivacious spitfire, defies seventeenth-century British conventions, taking many lovers and chafing against the idea of a traditional marriage. Meanwhile, younger sister Hannah is secretly trained in the art and science of healing by her doting father. When a disgraced May is sent to America to marry a distant cousin, Hannah fears she will never see her beloved sister again. After their father's death, Hannah travels to the New World to reunite with the only family she has left. Once in Maryland, however, Hannah learns May is dead and finds herself irresistibly drawn to her brother-in-law. Although she is told her sister died in childbirth, accumulating evidence seems to suggest otherwise, and Hannah realizes she must unravel the mystery of May's life and possible death no matter what price she may pay for unearthing the truth. An authentically detailed period piece with elements of gothic suspense thrown in for good measure. Margaret Flanagan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books; First Edition edition (June 2, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618462333
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618462339
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (55 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #518,977 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Mary Sharratt is an American writer living in the Pendle region of Lancashire, Northern England. Her new novel DAUGHTERS OF THE WITCHING HILL tells the vivid and wrenching story of a family caught in the Pendle witch-hunt of 1612. Her inspiration for the book arose directly from the wild, brooding landscape: the true story of the Pendle Witches unfolded almost literally in her backyard.

The author of the critically acclaimed novels SUMMIT AVENUE, THE REAL MINERVA, and THE VANISHING POINT, Sharratt is also coeditor of the subversive fiction anthology BITCH LIT, a celebration of female antiheroes, strong women who break all the rules.

She is currently at work on a new novel on the life of 12th mystic and polymath, Hildegard von Bingen.

 

Customer Reviews

55 Reviews
5 star:
 (36)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (55 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tale of two sisters (4.5 stars), June 12, 2006
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This review is from: The Vanishing Point (Paperback)
This is a tale of two sisters. One treats her sexuality as any man of any time would do: openly and without restraint of regard for social constructs. Her name is May, and this same sexual behavior has her unmarrigable in England and setting sail for Maryland to marry the son of her father's cousin. She regards this as an adventure though they have never met, and she is four years older than her soon to be husband Gabriel Washbrook. May has a younger sister, Hannah, who also does not fit into society because of the extensive medical education her physician father gave her. She stays in England to care for her aging father, but when he dies she heads off to join her sister in Maryland.

Only Hannah finds that upon reaching her sisters plantation that not only was the family's prosperity mentioned in her cousins letters false, but her sister is dead. Only Gabriel is left on the plantation, and he is half mad from grief, anger, and being totally isolated. Like Gabriel, Hannah is a born loner and her grief for her sister soon turns into love for her sister's widow. But still she has not received a satisfactory answer as to what happened to May.

This is a very well written book. The author has a lovely voice in her writing style. It is kind of a small, story and plot oriented novel, which was a relief after all the historical fiction novels I've read that tell people's whole life story with no desirable plot.

Chapters alternate as to the narrator (though it's all in third person except for the second to last chapter) which allows the story to unfold, and the mystery of May's death to be told in a very suspenseful manner. You won't find out what happened `till the end. I also quite liked the way the book was laid out-going back and forward in time from Hannah or Gabriel when they were together in 1692-1695 or May, Gabriel and Adele (the maidservant) when they were in 1689-1691.

I also liked, how for all their unusual (for the time) traits, Hannah and May pretty much were still stuck with what society excepted of them. There was no amazing feminist attitudes (which did not exists in this time) cropping up as in some other books with a strong female lead who turns into a crusader for women's rights. These were all normal people, and they fit into society as the time period dictated. They did deviate a little from the normal women of their time (adventures in the wilderness, wandering around woods on their own, dressing like boys), but in the end they still were women of the time.

Really the only things I didn't like about this book was that the devotion between Hannah and May was never really shown or explained, it was just implied that you would except it. I did feel that Hannah and May's feelings about the new world weren't as significant of a presence as they should have been, considering that they were in a totally new, very rough and mostly uninhabited world. Also I felt the love between Hannah and Gabriel was quite rushed at first and didn't develop to its full potential.

Other than that, it's a very good book. I recommend it to historical fiction fans.

Four point five stars.

For other reading on the early colonial days of North America check out "A Place Called Freedom" by Ken Follett, "Virgin Earth" by Philippa Gregory ("Earthly Joys" for the back story on that) and "Now Face to Face" by Karleen Koen (though you should read "Through a Glass Darkly first for the back story.)
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Historical Fiction at Its Best!, August 6, 2006
This review is from: The Vanishing Point (Paperback)
Mary Sharratt's The Vanishing Point is a wonderful example of historical fiction that grips you from the first words, twisting and turning into unexpected character development and bringing to life colonial America in ways seldom seen. Sharratt's characterizations carefully build on the seeds she plants at the beginning of the novel, and she tells the stories using several narratives to shed light on the complexities of life for planters during the late 1600s.

This is the story of Hannah Powers, whose elder sister May is the town wanton in an English village. Unable (and unwilling) to find a suitable marriage due to her loose ways, May accepts the offer of marriage to a distant cousin in America as a way to escape her past. After their father dies a couple of years later, Hannah decides to join her beloved elder sister and makes her way to May's home in the colonies. Upon arrival, she discovers her sister dead, the servants gone, and her brother-in-law Gabriel mourning his wife all alone in the isolated area. From there we follow Hannah as she develops feelings for Gabriel yet struggles with the inconsistencies in his stories over what really happened to May. Sharratt tells the story by revealing a layer at a time, meticulously using historical detail to bring the era to life and fill out the shadows that surround Hannah. This is a well-told tale, and makes me look forward to reading more by this outstanding author. Highly recommended both as historical fiction and as a quality mystery.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My mind still spins after the unraveling of a great work of fiction..., September 2, 2006
By 
H. Keanum (United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Vanishing Point (Paperback)
What a great story from Mary Sharratt! I finished the book in the near-dawn hours of morning because I simply couldn't put it down until the end. And when the book ended, with the kind of ending that clenches at your chest because of a most bittersweet ending for all the people involved, I still couldn't even stop thinking about it.

This book takes you back to the times of America's beginning, with the first colonizations into Maryland with the tale of two sisters, as different as night and day in every possible way, and shows how the way they live affects the other.

Mary Sharratt's style of writing is appealing in the best sense. Her careful prose and choice of words were befitting for the colonial times she wrote about and eased me into the time period. There was never a moment I felt ripped from the time period because she was so fluent in using many of the period's expressions and words. As you read The Vanishing Point, you can tell Sharratt researched for this book patiently and thoroughly.

Allusions and themes run smoothly through the book and at times were so deeply woven with insinuation, I wondered if I'd ever grasp all of the imagery presented. And hours after finishing the book, still contemplating its impeccable style and tale, I find there are likely more suggestions of deeper thought than I was comprehending in reading it. This is a book I seriously plan on reading again very soon to pick up on more details I may have missed the first time.

Sharratt, you are likely one of the finest writers of the times and hope to read future works.

A highly recommended, 5-star read to any lover of historical fiction at its best.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE MORNING THE LETTER ARRIVED, May Powers awoke with a premonition. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Anne Arundel Town, Richard Banham, Mistress Powers, Hannah Powers, Gabriel Washbrook, Master Washbrook, Nathan Washbrook, Banham's Landing, May Powers, Washbrook Plantation, Master Gabriel, Paul Banham, Banham Plantation, Book of Common Prayer, Eastern Shore, Patrick Flynn, Port Tobacco, Adele Desvarieux, Green Man, May God, Lord Baltimore, Lucy Mackett, May Washbrook, Mistress Washbrook, Monsieur Desvarieux
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