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Stormy Petrel

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272
PAGES
~4h 32min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
Published 1991 Chivers Audio Books
ISBN
0745140955, 9780745140957
Editions
Audio Cassette
Paperback
Library Binding
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About Author

Mary Stewart

Mary Florence Elinor Rainbow was born on 12 September 1916 in Sunderland, England, the United Kingdom. She graduated from Durham University, from where she received an honorary D.Litt in 2009. She was a lecturer in English Language and Literature there until her marriage in 1945 to Sir Frederick Stewart, former chairman of the Geology Department of Edinburgh University, who died in 2001. Lady Mary Stewart was author of twenty novels, a volume of poetry, and three books for young readers, she is admired for both her contemporary stories of romantic suspense and her historical novels. Her finest and most original achievement was Merlin Trilogy, an Arthurian saga: The Crystal Cave (1970), The Hollow Hills (1973) and The Last Enchantment (1979). The first of these was turned into a children’s television series in 1991. During years she resided in Scotland, where she died on 9 May 2014.

Description

Rose Fenemore is taking a break from her Cambridge teaching post to meet her brother Crispin on the island of Moila off the west coast of Scotland. She looks forward to a quiet holiday in a natural paradise of seabirds and wild flowers. But things do not turn out so idyllically. Her brother's arrival is delayed, and the island's peace is shattered by the appearance one night of two men seeking shelter from a violent summer storm--men whose conflicting stories draw Rose into a web of menace and suspicion. Ewen Mackay claims to have grown up in the cottage. John Parsons also rouses Rose's skepticism...and more tender feelings as well. Rose's discovery of the stormy petrels--the fragile, elusive birds who nest ashore but spend most of their lives flying close above the sea waves--comes to symbolize the confusion she feels about Ewen Mackay, the man known as the island's prodigal son, and the man calling himself John Parsons, whose account of himself Rose has every reason to distrust.

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