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Year of Wonders: A Novel of the Plague Paperback – April 30, 2002
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An unforgettable tale, set in 17th century England, of a village that quarantines itself to arrest the spread of the plague, from the author The Secret Chord and of March, winner of the Pulitzer Prize
When an infected bolt of cloth carries plague from London to an isolated village, a housemaid named Anna Frith emerges as an unlikely heroine and healer. Through Anna's eyes we follow the story of the fateful year of 1666, as she and her fellow villagers confront the spread of disease and superstition. As death reaches into every household and villagers turn from prayers to murderous witch-hunting, Anna must find the strength to confront the disintegration of her community and the lure of illicit love. As she struggles to survive and grow, a year of catastrophe becomes instead annus mirabilis, a "year of wonders."
Inspired by the true story of Eyam, a village in the rugged hill country of England, Year of Wonders is a richly detailed evocation of a singular moment in history. Written with stunning emotional intelligence and introducing "an inspiring heroine" (The Wall Street Journal), Brooks blends love and learning, loss and renewal into a spellbinding and unforgettable read.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Books
- Publication dateApril 30, 2002
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions7.74 x 5.02 x 0.61 inches
- ISBN-100142001430
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From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
From The New Yorker
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker
Review
"The novel glitters . . . A deep imaginative engagement with how people are changed by catastrophe." —The New Yorker
“Plague stories remind us that we cannot manage without community . . . Year of Wonders is a testament to that very notion . . . [The villagers] assume collective responsibility for combating the plague, rather than seeing it as an act of God before which they are powerless.” —The Washington Post
"Year of Wonders is a vividly imagined and strangely consoling tale of hope in a time of despair." —O, The Oprah Magazine
"Brooks proves a gifted storyteller as she subtly reveals how ignorance, hatred and mistrust can be as deadly as any virus. . . . Year of Wonders is itself a wonder." —People
"A glimpse into the strangeness of history that simultaneously enables us to see a reflection of ourselves." —The New York Times Book Review
"Elegant and engaging." —Arthur Golden
"Year of Wonders has it all: strong characters, a trememdous sense of time and place, a clearly defined heroine and a dastardly villain." —The Denver Post
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Apple-picking Time
I used to love this season. The wood stacked by the door, the tang of its sap still speaking of forest. The hay made, all golden in the low afternoon light. The rumble of the apples tumbling into the cellar bins. Smells and sights and sounds that said this year it would be all right: there'd be food and warmth for the babies by the time the snows came. I used to love to walk in the apple orchard at this time of the year, to feel the soft give underfoot when I trod on a fallen fruit. Thick, sweet scents of rotting apple and wet wood. This year, the hay stooks are few and the woodpile scant, and neither matters much to me.
They brought the apples yesterday, a cartload for the rectory cellar. Late pickings, of course: I saw brown spots on more than a few. I had words with the carter over it, but he told me we were lucky to get as good as we got, and I suppose it's true enough. There are so few people to do the picking. So few people to do anything. And those of us who are left walk around as if we're half asleep. We are all so tired.
I took an apple that was crisp and good and sliced it, thin as paper, and carried it into that dim room where he sits, still and silent. His hand is on the Bible, but he never opens it. Not anymore. I asked him if he'd like me to read it to him. He turned his head to look at me, and I started. It was the first time he'd looked at me in days. I'd forgotten what his eyes could do-what they could make us do-when he stared down from the pulpit and held us, one by one, in his gaze. His eyes are the same, but his face has altered so, drawn and haggard, each line etched deep. When he came here, just three years since, the whole village made a jest of his youthful looks and laughed at the idea of being preached at by such a pup. If they saw him now, they would not laugh, even if they could remember how to do so.
"You cannot read, Anna."
"To be sure, I can, Rector. Mrs. Mompellion taught me."
He winced and turned away as I mentioned her, and instantly I regretted it. He does not trouble to bind his hair these days, and from where I stood the long, dark fall of it hid his face, so that I could not read his expression. But his voice, when he spoke again, was composed enough. "Did she so? Did she so?" he muttered. "Well, then, perhaps one day I'll hear you and see what kind of a job she made of it. But not today, thank you, Anna. Not today. That will be all."
A servant has no right to stay, once she's dismissed. But I did stay, plumping the pillow, placing a shawl. He won't let me lay a fire. He won't let me give him even that little bit of comfort. Finally, when I'd run out of things to pretend to do, I left him.
In the kitchen, I chose a couple of the spotted apples I'd culled from the buckets and walked out to the stables. The courtyard hadn't been swept in a sennight. It smelled of rotting straw and horse piss. I had to hitch up my skirt to keep it off the muck. Before I was halfway across, I could hear the thud of his horse's rump as he turned and strutted in his confinement, gouging clefts into the floor of the stall. There's no one strong or skilled enough now to handle him.
The stable boy, whose job it was to keep the courtyard raked, was asleep on the floor of the tack room. He jumped when he saw me, making a great show of searching for the snath that had slipped from his hand when he'd dozed off. The sight of the scythe blade still upon his workbench vexed me, for I'd asked him to mend it long since, and the timothy now was naught but blown seed head and no longer worth the cutting. I was set to scold him about this, and about the filth outside, but his poor face, so pinched and exhausted, made me swallow the words.
Dust motes sparkled in the sudden shaft of sunlight as I opened the stable door. The horse stopped his pawing, holding one hoof aloft and blinking in the unfamiliar glare. Then he reared up on his muscled haunches and punched the air, saying, as plainly as he could, "If you aren't him, get out of here." Although I don't know when a brush was last laid on him, his coat still gleamed like bronze where the light touched it. When Mr. Mompellion had arrived here on this horse, the common talk had been that such a fine stallion was no fit steed for a priest. And people liked not to hear the rector calling him Anteros, after one of the old Puritans told them it was the name of a pagan idol. When I made so bold as to ask Mr. Mompellion about it, he had only laughed and said that even Puritans should recall that pagans, too, are children of God and their stories part of His creation.
I stood with my back pressed against the stall, talking gently to the great horse. "Ah, I'm so sorry you're cramped up in here all day. I brought you a small something." Slowly, I reached into the pocket of my pinafore and held out an apple. He turned his massive head a little, showing me the white of one liquid eye. I kept prattling, softly, as I used to with the children when they were scared or hurt. "You like apples. I know you do. Go on, then, and have it." He pawed the ground again, but with less conviction. Slowly, his nostrils flaring as he studied the scent of the apple, and of me, he stretched his broad neck toward me. His mouth was soft as a glove, and warm, as it brushed my hand, taking the apple in a single bite. As I reached into my pocket for the second one, he tossed his head and the apple juice sprayed. He was up now, angrily boxing the air, and I knew I'd lost the moment. I dropped the other apple on the floor of the stall and slid out quickly, resting my back against the closed door, wiping a string of horse spittle from my face. The stable boy slid his eyes at me and went silently on with his mending.
Well, I thought, it's easier to bring a small comfort to that poor beast than it is to his master. When I came back into the house, I could hear the rector out of his chair, pacing. The rectory floors are old and thin, and I could follow his steps by the creak of the boards. Up and back he walked, up and back, up and back. If only I could get him downstairs, to do his pacing in the garden. But once, when I suggested it, he looked as if I'd proposed something as ambitious as a trek up the White Peak. When I went to fetch his plate, the apple slices were all there, untouched, turning brown. Tomorrow, I'll start to work with the cider press. He'll take a drink without noticing sometimes, even when I can't get him to eat anything. And it's no use letting a cellar full of fruit go bad. If there's one thing I can't stand anymore, it's the scent of a rotting apple. * * *
At day's end, when I leave the rectory for home, I prefer to walk through the orchard on the hill rather than go by the road and risk meeting people. After all we've been through together, it's just not possible to pass with a polite, "Good night t'ye." And yet I haven't the strength for more. Sometimes, not often, the orchard can bring back better times to me. These memories of happiness are fleeting things, reflections in a stream, glimpsed all broken for a second and then swept away in the current of grief that is our life now. I can't say that I ever feel what it felt like then, when I was happy. But sometimes something will touch the place where that feeling was, a touch as slight and swift as the brush of a moth's wing in the dark.
In the orchard of a summer night, if I close my eyes, I can hear the small voices of children: whispers and laughter, running feet and rustling leaves. Come this time of year, it's Sam that I think of-strong Sam Frith grabbing me around the waist and lifting me into the low, curved branch of a gnarly, old tree. I was just fifteen. "Marry me," he said. And why wouldn't I? My father's croft had ever been a joyless place. My father loved a pot better than he loved his children, though he kept on getting them, year passing year. To my stepmother, Aphra, I was always a pair of hands before I was a person, someone to toil after her babies. Yet it was she who spoke up for me, and it was her words that swayed my father to give his assent. In his eyes I was but a child still, too young to be handfasted. "Open your eyes, husband, and look at her," said Aphra. "You're the only man in the village who doesn't. Better she be wedded early to Frith than bedded untimely by some youth with a prick more upright than his morals."
Sam Frith was a miner with his own good lead seam to work. He had a fine small cottage and no children from a first wife who'd died. It did not take him long to give me children. Two sons in three years. Three good years. I should say, for there are many now too young to remember it, that it was not a time when we were raised up thinking to be happy. The Puritans, who are few amongst us now, and sorely pressed, had the running of this village then. It was their sermons we grew up listening to in a church bare of adornment, their notions of what was heathenish that hushed the Sabbath and quieted the church bells, that took the ale from the tavern and the lace from the dresses, the ribands from the Maypole and the laughter out of the public lanes. So the happiness I got from my sons, and from the life that Sam provided, burst on me as sudden as the first spring thaw. When it all turned to hardship and bleakness again, I was not surprised. I went calmly to the door that terrible night with the torches smoking and the voices yelling and the men with their faces all black so that they looked headless in the dark. The orchard can bring back that night, too, if I let my mind linger there. I stood in the doorway with the baby in my arms, watching the torches bobbing and weaving crazy lines of light through the trees. "Walk slow," I whispered. "Walk slow, because it won't be true until I hear the words." And they did walk slow, trudging up that little hill as if it were a mountain. But slow as they came, in the end they arrived, jostling and shuffling. They pushed the biggest one, Sam's friend, out in front. There was a mush of rotten apple on his boot. Funny thing to notice, but I suppose I was looking down so that I wouldn't have to look into his face.
They were four days digging out Sam's body. They took it straight to the sexton's instead of bringing it home to me. They tried to keep me from it, but I wouldn't be kept. I would do that last thing for him. She knew. "Tell them to let her go to him," Elinor Mompellion said to the rector in that gentle voice of hers. Once she spoke, it was over. She so rarely asked anything of him. And once Michael Mompellion nodded, they parted, those big men, moving aside and letting me through.
To be sure, there wasn't much there that was him. But what there was, I tended. That was two years ago. Since then, I've tended so many bodies, people I loved and people I barely knew. But Sam's was the first. I bathed him with the soap he liked, because he said it smelled of the children. Poor slow Sam. He never quite realized that it was the children who smelled of the soap. I washed them in it every night before he came home. I made it with heather blooms, a much gentler soap than the one I made for him. His soap was almost all grit and lye. It had to be, to scrape that paste of sweat and soil from his skin. He would bury his poor tired face in the babies' hair and breathe the fresh scent of them. It was the closest he got to the airy hillsides. Down in the mine at daybreak, out again after sundown. A life in the dark. And a death there, too.
And now it is Elinor Mompellion's Michael who sits all day in the dark, with the shutters closed. And I try to serve him, although sometimes I feel that I'm tending just another in that long procession of dead. But I do it. I do it for her. I tell myself I do it for her. Why else would I do it, after all?
Product details
- Publisher : Penguin Books
- Publication date : April 30, 2002
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0142001430
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Dimensions : 7.74 x 5.02 x 0.61 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #28,901 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #228 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
- #779 in Historical Fiction (Books)
- #849 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Geraldine Brooks is the author of the novels The Secret Chord, Caleb's Crossing, People of the Book, March (which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2006) and Year of Wonders, recently optioned by Olivia Coleman. She has also written three works of non-fiction: Nine Parts of Desire, based on her experiences among Muslim women in the mideast, Foreign Correspondence, a memoir about an Australian childhood enriched by penpals around the world and her adult quest to find them, and The Idea of Home:Boyer Lectures 2011. Brooks started out as a reporter in her hometown, Sydney, and went on to cover conflicts as a Wall Street Journal correspondent in Bosnia, Somalia, and the Middle East. She now lives on Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts with two sons, a horse named Valentine and a dog named Bear.
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Customers find this historical novel to be a fast and easy read with a gripping story and strong female lead character. The writing is praised for its descriptive style, and customers appreciate its historical accuracy, noting it's based on true events. The emotional content receives mixed reactions, with some finding it deeply moving while others describe it as depressing.
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Customers find the book easy to read and appreciate it as a historical novel.
"Great read; different from anything I have read before. Thoroughly enjoyed the story and learnt a lot about British history." Read more
"This Is a great book that depicts the life of women in medieval England and how the residents of a rural village survived the plague...." Read more
"A good read and fascinating story based on an English village that quarantined itself when plague was brought to their town, but not the surrounding..." Read more
"A good book, well written with a great storyline. I love reading books set in a time hundreds of years ago and found this book hard to put down...." Read more
Customers praise the flowing narrative and gripping plot of the book, describing it as an inspiring story with a great ending.
"...are full of the spirit and contradictions that draw us into a good story, yet it's her skill in creating a whole cast of wonderful supporting..." Read more
"...Even though it didn’t “feel” 17th century to me, it was still a great story that kept me turning pages longer than I should have." Read more
"A good read and fascinating story based on an English village that quarantined itself when plague was brought to their town, but not the surrounding..." Read more
"...The ending was a bit strange - really out of left field, and the pace was really rushed compared to the rest of the book, however I still really..." Read more
Customers find the book engaging, describing it as a compelling and satisfying read that holds their interest from start to finish.
"Interesting, especially as it based on a story that actually happened but would have been more interesting if it hadn't been so silly." Read more
"Well written. Engaging. Thoughtful. It is hard to imagine living through those times. In comparison existing in the time of Covid 19 is much easier." Read more
"...It sounded interesting, so... Actually, it's fascinating and very well written...." Read more
"A most compelling and enjoyable read. I got lost in the narrative and could not wait to see how it would all unfold." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, describing it as beautiful and accessible, with one customer noting how well it portrays the landscape.
"Well written. Engaging. Thoughtful. It is hard to imagine living through those times. In comparison existing in the time of Covid 19 is much easier." Read more
"I am so glad to have discovered Geraldine Brooks lately. Beautifully written , a gruesome topic but carried along so elegantly it is hard to..." Read more
"The book is very well written and referenced and provides insights on life during a dark period of our past. The story is capturing and moving...." Read more
"Wonderfully written. Gives a heartbreaking insight into the plague as it ravaged a small town and the sacrifice made by the brave townspeople...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, particularly noting the strong female lead character Anna Frith.
"Fascinating history and wonderful characters! If you like historical fiction this book is very enjoyable. As are all of G Brooks novels." Read more
"A great historical novel. The characters are well developed. A wonderful book to discuss with high school students. Thumbs up." Read more
"Another great historical fiction with believable characters. Story had a real twist at the end that I did not anticipate. Great read." Read more
"...The characters were well developed and the dialogue touched on how women were treated in those days...." Read more
Customers praise the book's historical accuracy, noting its great research and amazing detail of the period, with one customer describing it as an immersive tour through English history.
"...the everyday life and choices that the characters go through were well researched and felt to me to be correctly and respectfully detailed...." Read more
"...Yet the plague will have it's deadly quota. Well-researched and detailed, it is through Anna's voice that we learn of these village folk, who is..." Read more
"Fascinating fictional/historical novel. I want to see this village next time I am in England." Read more
"A very well done book. Thoroughly researched. At first the language is a little off-putting, but then you realize you're reading a period piece!..." Read more
Customers appreciate the historical fiction elements of the book, noting it is based on true events and is historically accurate.
"Another excellent read from Brooks. Historical fiction which brought me to reflect on our recent past….four more words are four more than necessary:-)" Read more
"...Based on a true story and told through the eyes of Anna, reading about this small village is an emotional experience that offers opportunities to..." Read more
"I chose this rating because the book is a wonderful saga, historically accurate spun around a village hit by the plague in England in the 1600s...." Read more
"...Geraldine Brook's portrayal of life and the times of that age was believable and the read was compelling. I could not put this book down...." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the emotional content of the book, with some finding it a deeply moving look at adversity and others describing it as a depressing story that tends toward melodramatic.
"I enjoyed this book. Well written, emotional and gives a good description of one persons perspective in a sad time in history." Read more
"...I need to stay away from this author, because the same applies here: depressing, slow-paced, very dark. Just not my thing." Read more
"...Her prose is engagingg and haunting...." Read more
"This is a beautiful and sad story. I cannot recommend the audible version - this is much better reading it yourself." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseObviously a story written about the plague is hard but Geraldine Brooks did an admirable job making the people real. The authors way with words, is lovely and captivating. Even though it was a dark subject I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I plan to read more by Ms Brooks
- Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2024Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseInspired by the true story of the village of Eyam, Derbyshire, Year of Wonders is a historical fiction novel about an English village that decides to quarantine itself after a bolt of infected cloth from London begins spreading the bubonic plague among the villagers in 1666.
As well as being an immersive tour through a specific period of history, Year of Wonders is also deeply concerned with matters of faith, superstition, and religion. The book is told through the eyes of Anna Frith, a housemaid who forms a deep friendship the village's minister and his wife. As the death toll mounts and the villagers turn to pagan superstition, Anna must reckon with the harsh reality that God has turned his back on their village.
Alongside Shusako Endo's Silence, I think Year of Wonders might be one of the best novels about God's absence in the midst of extreme suffering. Year of Wonders really slaps you in the face with the reality that a lot of what we consider "blessings" and "things working out" is really a result of modern convenience. We really have nothing to compare to the horrors a real-life plague in the Middle Ages — Year of Wonders is an increasingly grim and unrelenting novel, and it doesn't shy away from the randomness of death, the horrors of childbirth, and a fascinatingly supernatural worldview.
I appreciate author Geraldine Brooks handling of faith in Year of Wonders – a lot of historical fiction will simply give lip service to the "idea" and "customs" of faith, despite the fact that people in the past were way more religious and enmeshed in the liturgical calendar than modern society. Also, refreshingly, Year of Wonders isn't very interested in transposing 21st-century cultural norms into a 17th-century context — this is down and dirty history that doesn't pull any punches in depicting how hard life was (especially if you were a woman).
This is my first novel by Geraldine Brooks, and she's an incredibly accomplished writer of historical fiction — accolades include a Pulitzer Prize in Literature — so the writing is top-notched and the research impeccable. In short, Year of Wonders is the best type of historical fiction — it transports you to a slice of history in such a way that it really drives home the truism that the "past is a foreign country."
- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI was not sure then I first started to read this book. Very hard start. But it brought to mind the time of Covid and how humans act. Hind site tells your how things should have been but humans are surprising. In a group, they are unpredictable.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI now have a new author I am in awe of. Geraldine Brooks handles historical fiction with skilled hands and compelling prose. Having first read her novel Horse, which I was unable to put down, and then March, which was such an incredible Civil War story from such an interesting perspective, I just finished Year of Wonder, a novel of the plague which had such spectacular character development and surprising insight into the human spirits’ ability to cope with extreme loss and tragedy, that I’m already to begin another of her books.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2001I heard an interview with Geraldine Brooks, the author of the book, in which she discussed her motivations and perspectives in writing this book. It sounded interesting, so...
Actually, it's fascinating and very well written. It's told from the perspective of Anna Frith, a young servant to the town minister and his wife, who, as we learn in the first chapter, is a recent widow who has also lost her children. The book is written "in media res," (remember your 11th grade English?) in that it begins in early 1666, in the full grip of the Great Plague, and then goes back to the early part of 1665 and begins at the beginning.
Briefly, and not to give too much away, it is about a small village in the lead-mining district of England that is exposed to the Plague by means of a flea-infested bolt of cloth that is brought into the village by a tailor who boards with the narrator, Anna. He is the first to die, followed fairly swiftly by about half the population of the village in one year. The village minister suggests that the village quarantine itself, so as to protect its neighbors from the Plague, and the villagers agree.
Thus begins a year of horrors... and wonders. The Plague leaps quixotically from house to house, picking off some residents and sparing others, with no apparent rhyme or reason. Led by the minister and his wife. the village tries to unearth God's will and purpose in besetting them with this affliction, but nothing they come up with seems to work, and the body count keeps climbing. The Plague finally looses its grip after a year and some very unexpected revelations.
The book is very well written. You can clearly hear the voice of the young narrator, a 20-year-old widow who has lost everything but her common sense. As she moves from crisis to crisis, you watch her grow from a fairly 2-dimensional character to a fully realized one, until she takes her destiny into her own hands in an action that would be unusual today, let alone 350 years ago.
The book uses the vocabulary of the time, which includes many words that are no longer in our vocabulary, and are therefore unknown to us. The book offers no glossary, so you are on your own to figure out their meaning. This has a 2-fold effect: on the one hand, it slows down the reading somewhat, and makes for a certain degree of frustration because you don't really know what these terms mean. On the other, it certainly lends authenticity to the narration, and if you stop and think about it, you can probably figure it out. (The most exciting aspect of the book is that, after many, many years of crossword-puzzling that called for "adit" as the obsolete term for a mine entrance, this is the FIRST time I've ever actually seen the word used - puzzlers rejoice!)
Partly because of the use of contemporaneous vocabulary, you get a real sense of what it must have been like to live in a small, poor village in the mid-17th century. Life was difficult at best, and this book brings that every-day-ness to life better than any other I can think of. It exposes the daily life of common people, under extreme duress, certainly, but still quite authentically.
What makes it really interesting is that while presented as fiction, the book is based on fact; the village of Eyem quarantined itself, at the suggestion of its minister, during the Great Plague of 1666. The character of the minister in this book, Mr. Mompellion, is based on the real minister.
I recommend this book. It's a fairly fast read and will leave you thinking about it at the end. I went back and reread some passages several times, just to make sure I had understood them properly - if you read the book, you will too, and will know which passages I'm referring to. Enjoy!
Top reviews from other countries
MandyMReviewed in Australia on May 15, 20205.0 out of 5 stars A book for the times
I have had this book on my TBR list for a couple of years. I have read several of Geraldine Brooks’s other books and had not realised that this was her first novel. Her writing is fantastic and she is a great storyteller.
I was inspired to read this book now, as someone at work has started an “iso” book group, and this was the chosen book. For anyone who reads this review in the future, this is because we are in the midst of the COVID 19 pandemic and have all been socially isolated and working from home. This book is appropriate then as it deals with the plague epidemic of 1665-6 in the UK, and specifically the plague village of Eyam in Derbyshire. This village was stricken by bubonic plague, and took the unusual step of cutting itself off from the rest of the world to stop the spread of the disease. The villagers themselves suffered greatly, and many died.
We now know a great deal about this disease and how it is spread, but that was not the case in the 17th century. The story is told by Anna, who is a survivor- not only of the plague, but of other tragedies in her life. Her husband Sam is killed in an accident in his lead mine, a common occurrence in those days. She becomes great friends with the minister’s wife, Elinor, who teaches her to read. Anna has a very hard life but ends up happy and fulfilled, albeit far away from Derbyshire.
This is a story of love and loss and triumph over the odds. It is also historically interesting, being based on a true story. I found that much of it resonated strongly with our own situation in the current pandemic and it almost could have been written last week, not in 2011.
Highly recommended, especially for lovers of Geraldine Brooks’s work.
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htkReviewed in Japan on March 26, 20184.0 out of 5 stars 小説として面白く、ペストの実情も知ることができた
Format: KindleVerified Purchase17世紀後半のイギリスの小村。無学で貧しい父と継母に育てられたアンは、夫を事故で失い、村の牧師夫妻の召使として二人の子供と暮らしていたが、そこにペストが流行する。次々と村人が死んでいく事態に、牧師は外部に病気が広がらないように村を閉鎖する。死の恐怖に直面した人々は魔女として無実の女性を殺すなど、迷信に走ったり酒びたりになったりする。アンも子供を失うが、その中で自分のとるべき行動を見出していく。たまたま同じようにペストを背景に展開し、ストーリー性が面白かったKen Follett のWorld Without Endを直前に読んでいたが、こちらは牧師の妻のエリノアにも助けられて内面成長をしていくアンが丁寧に描かれていて、終わりまで一気に読んだ。ペストの話は史実に基づいているそうだが、終わりがやや強引で、作者が自分の経験を無理やりに入れ込んだ印象があったので星を一つ下げた。
MBReviewed in India on November 11, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent novel with the memory of the Black Death
The Year or Wonders, what Dryden called Annus Mirabilis though in the backdrop of the traumatic civil war, here Brooks beautifully captures the year, the 1665 - the year when nearly 5000 people were dying in a week - the year of the Black Death. The Plague and the Great Fire of London erased one third of London's population in two successive years. Brooks in her novel portrays the role of women, and the ways to survive amidst the pandemic.
This is a magnificent novel.
However, I got a book with yellowed pages with pencil markings, which I do not like anyhow.
Keep reading. Keep engage in getting the orgasmes of the pleasures of reading a text.
TAReviewed in Germany on December 8, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Astounding
It’s not just the eloquence of the language. It’s the surprising turns as life finds a way amidst the decay of death. One of the best reads in a long time.
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Laura c.Reviewed in Italy on November 11, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Intenso
La narrazione è Ispirata da una storia vera, è intensa e molto profonda. Si legge d'un fiato, ma il ricordo e le emozione rimangono a lungo.
Laura






























