Synopses & Reviews
Ivy is used to being overlooked. The youngest in a family of thieves, scoundrels, and roustabouts, the girl with the flame-colored hair and odd-colored eyes is declared useless by her father from the day she is born. But that's only if you look at her but don't see. For Ivy has a quality that makes people take notice. It's more than beauty -- and it draws people toward her.
Which makes her the perfect subject for an aspiring painter named Oscar Aretino Frosdick, a member of the pre-Raphaelite school of artists. Oscar is determined to make his mark on the art world, with Ivy as his model and muse. But behind Ivy's angelic looks lurk dark secrets and a troubled past -- a past that has given her an unfortunate taste for laudanum. And when treachery and jealousy surface in the Eden that is the artist's garden, Ivy must learn to be more than a pretty face if she is to survive.
Julie Hearn, author of The Minister's Daughter and The Sign of the Raven, has created a memorable tale of nineteenth-century England with a character destined to take her place alongside Dickens's Pip and Oliver Twist.
Review
"Deliciously Dickensian." -- Washington Post
Review
andlt;divandgt;"Deliciously Dickensian." -- Washington Post
Review
"Deliciously Dickensian." -- andlt;iandgt;Washington Postandlt;/iandgt;
Synopsis
Ivy, the youngest in a family of thieves, con artists, and roustabouts, seems destined for an unhappy fateand#8212;until she and her brother are plucked from their surroundings by a charitable benefactor and sent to school. From the scams of the slums, where Ivy develops an unfortunate taste for laudanum, to the gardens of the most talented artists of the age, where Ivyand#8217;s striking hair and incandescent eyes propel her into a career as a model, Ivy is a story of nineteenth-century sex, drugs, and rock and#8216;nand#8217; roll.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andnbsp;
About the Author
andlt;bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Julie Hearn andlt;/bandgt;was born in Abingdon, near Oxford, England, and has been writing all her life. A former features editor and columnist, she was studying for a teaching degree when she decided to take a class with Philip Pullman. and#8220;You donand#8217;t want to teach,and#8221; Pullman told her. and#8220;You want to write.and#8221; She took his advice and became a childrenand#8217;s book novelist.