The apothecary's daughter [electronic resource] / Julie Klassen.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781441203564 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 1441203567 (electronic bk.)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource (415 p.)
- Publisher: Minneapolis, Minn. : Bethany House, c2008.
Content descriptions
Source of Description Note: | Description based on print version record. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Young women > Fiction. Villages > England > Fiction. Fathers and daughters > Fiction. Family secrets > Fiction. Pharmacy > Fiction. London (England) > Fiction. |
Genre: | Regency fiction. Love stories. Electronic books. |
Other Formats and Editions
Electronic resources
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2008 December #2
"While working in her father s apothecary shop in the small village of Bedsley Priors, Lilly Haswell dreams of one day traveling the world, perhaps even finding her mother, who had left her family three years before and has never been heard from since. When the chance to live with her maternal aunt and uncle is unexpectedly offered to her, Lilly sees the opportunity for a new life. Once in London, she indulges in a bit of romantic flirtation with several different men while also learning more about her mother s mysterious disappearance. Then, when a crisis forces Lilly to return to Bedsley Priors, she faces the difficult challenge of giving up her fabulous independent life in order to help out the family she has always loved. Filled with fascinating details about the apothecary trade in Regency England, Klassen s latest superbly crafted inspirational romance is an emotionally compelling and quietly powerful tale about the importance of faith and hope, family and friends, love and loyalty." Copyright 2008 Booklist Reviews. - ForeWord Magazine Reviews : ForeWord Magazine Reviews 2009 January/February
Young Lilly Haswell stands on Honeystreet Bridge in a small town in the Wiltshire district of Regency-era England, searching the barges and narrow boats for a familiar face. Her mother's run off, leaving her father, the apothecary Charles Haswell, her brain-damaged brother Charlie, and Lilly with no word about why. However, Lilly "felt a shameful thrill" at her mother's disappearance. She imagined her mother traveling the world, something Lilly longs to do, stuck as she is "in an inconsequential village" she "was certain that would never be enough."
Klassen, author of Lady of Milkweed Manor, a Christy Award finalist, enriches Lilly's story with wonderful specific details, such as Re-gency settings and rules of society and concoctions of the times, like "tempered figs"---figs pressed and heated as much as a patient could endure---to ease breast pain, and "ointment of lemon, rose water, and silver supplement" to treat blemishes. Further, at the beginning of each chapter are gems of healing remedies from Culpepper's Complete Herbal or other sources, as well as a view into the period through advertisements in the Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette from 1833.
Though Lilly's longing for a different life is realized through her mother's brother, a member of London society, she can't es-cape her upbringing in her father's shop. Lilly is a "rememberer"; her gift of eidetic memory is an essential component in dispensing medicine. At a society party when the father of a friend is choking to death, Lilly steps up to the plate, obtains a "probang" from the house medicine chest and uses the flexible tube to dislodge a peppermint that is stuck in the man's throat. Saving this man's life spoils her Lon-don Season; there is no way that any gentleman of quality would offer marriage to a woman whose father was "in trade."
Nevertheless, several beaux seek Lilly's favor, from the disreputable Lord Marlow of her hometown to Dr. Graves, a newly-minted physician. However, her life straddles the tense juncture between three professions: university-trained doctors, surgeons who learn their trade on the battlefield, and the apothecaries. It is upon this landscape that Lilly finds her true place in the world. (January)
©2008 ForeWord Magazine. All Rights Reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2008 November #1
In this new Regency by the author of Christy Award finalist Lady of Milkweed Manor, Lillian Haswell, the daughter of the village apothecary, must save her father's business when he falls ill by making it appear that he is still making the diagnoses and writing the prescriptions. But a rival apothecary and a suspicious physician watch her closely, while three suitors vie for her hand.
[Page 55]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2008 November #4
Klassen's debut novel, Lady of Milkweed Manor, was a Christy Award finalist, and her new Regency promises the same thanks to fine storytelling and knowledge of the apothecary's art. Lillian Haswell yearns to leave her father's apothecary shop in their small town and happily accepts an invitation to live in London. She leaves behind a handicapped brother, friends, her lonely father and memories of her lost mother, but finds that London holds its own troubles. Will Roger Bromley propose? What about the timid physician Adam Graves? And the dastardly Roderick Marlow? Will her humble origins ruin her chances of a good match? Complications ensue as Lillian is called home when word comes of her father's ill health. She takes over the apothecary shopâillegal, because a woman could not dispense medicineâand begins again thanks to her father's former assistant Francis Baylor. Klassen blends her tale well; each ingredientâromance, friendship, healing arts, mysteryâis measured to produce a lively, lengthy tale that will satisfy Regency aficionados and general readers, too. (Jan.)
[Page 39]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.