Welcome to my shoe case for Women of Pearl Island by Polly Crosby which is been hosted by HarperCollins
THE WOMEN OF PEARL ISLAND
Author: Polly Crosby
ISBN: 9780778311140
Publication Date: December 7, 2021
Publisher: Park Row Books
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Book Summary:
With the same atmosphere and
imagination of THE BOOK OF
HIDDEN WONDERS,
Polly Crosby’s new novel,
THE WOMEN OF PEARL ISLAND
is set on a lush, secluded island
where family secrets bring together
an unlikely friendship.
On a secluded island off the British coast,
an elderly woman named Marianne
collects butterflies and memories
from her past. No longer able to catch
butterflies
herself, she enlists the help of a
young woman named Tartelin who
has peculiar
birthmark on her cheek. Tartelin’s
mother has recently passed, leaving her
unmoored and eager for new
beginnings on the island.
Marianne has spent most of her life
on the island, her family having owned it
for generations. She begins to tell
her young assistant her family’s story –
from the prosperous days when they
harvested pearls and held banquets,
to the harder times and her father’s desperate
money-making schemes. But during WWII, the British government
commandeered the island for nuclear testing and they were all forced to leave.
Though, secret to everyone, Marianne stayed behind and experienced something
she calls “the blast,” an event that changed everything for her. Now, the older woman
is obsessed with tracking the changes in butterflies and other creatures on the island
to prove what she witnessed so many decades before.
With a mystery spanning decades, this is an emotional and atmospheric
story of a young woman coming into her own as she forges an unlikely
friendship with her employer, both women grieving their pasts and together,
embracing a new future.
ONE
Tartelin
Summer 2018
“I do not require diaper changing, I do not require spoon-feeding, I do not require my ego
massaging. What I do require is someone with a deft pair of hands. I asked for someone with
experience in dealing with little things, delicate things. A scientist, perhaps. Is that you?”
I nod.
“Show me your hands, then, child.”
I hold them out, palm side downward, and she wheels herself over and inspects them.
Her own hands, I see now, have a tremor.
“You’re a pretty girl,” she says, her eyes drifting over my face, glancing off my cheek, and
I feel my skin redden. “Not very robust, though. Are you sure this is the right job for you?” I open
my mouth to speak, but she cuts me off. “What did you do, before you came here? How is it that
you are suited to this vacancy?”
I frown. We went over all this in our letters, back and forth, back and forth. Written on
paper, not sent by email, each one signed Miss Marianne Stourbridge in her regimented,
barbed-wire scrawl. My life back home was the reason she chose me. But then, she is old, and
she can’t be expected to remember everything.
“I grew up around my mother’s artwork, helping her out in her studio,” I say, more loudly
than I mean to. “And then I went to art school myself. Mum’s work was focused on found
objects, making art from bits of nature...feathers, leaves and twigs—”
“Lepidoptera aren’t ‘bits of nature,’ Miss Brown.”
“She also made sculptures out of grains of rice in her spare time. I helped her.”
“Why on earth would anyone do that?” She leaves the ques-tion hanging in the air and
turns her chair abruptly, wheeling herself back to her desk.
The chair is made from cane. It looks like an antique, and I’m surprised it still works. It
must be exhausting to propel.
“It’s a shame you don’t have a scientific background, but now you’re here, you’ll have to
do. Here, hold this.” She lifts a pair of gold tweezers into the air and I hasten forward and take
them. “No, not like that. Pinch. Gently. That’s it.”
I adjust my hold and feel how the spring of the tines is like an extension of my fingers,
and I’m back with my mother and she’s saying, “Careful, Tartelin, don’t squeeze too hard.
Feather barbs bruise easily.” But before I can use this new-found body part, the tweezers are
whisked away from me, and she’s turning again to the desk and bending over her work. I stand
by her side and wait, wondering if I’m allowed to go. The clock on the mantel chimes loudly. I
count eight. I look at my watch. It’s ten past two.
Miss Stourbridge? Shall I adjust your clock?”
“No point. It’ll only go back to eight o’clock.”
I look over at it, frowning. The second hand is juddering in jerky movements. It makes
me dizzy to look at it, as if it’s mea-suring a different kind of time. I turn back to my employer.
Miss Stourbridge is so still as she works. I can see her teas-ing the body of a dead moth
from a cocoon, her fingers mov-ing infinitesimally slowly. I look around the room. It is lined in
dark panels of wood, and every surface has frames and frames of butterflies and moths, glinting
pins plunged into husked bodies.
“Did you catch all these butterflies?”
She is silent, and at first I think she hasn’t heard me. But then I see she’s holding her
breath so as not to disturb the moth’s delicate wings. I watch closely, the clock ticking behind us.
I’m looking not at her work but at her ribs, waiting for them to inflate, waiting for her nostrils to
swell, anything that shows air is passing into her chest. My eyes sting from the pain of staring.
She is so still that she has become a part of the chair she sits in. Only her finger and thumb
move ach-ingly slowly, and the minutes tick by.
When I was young, I used to try to be as still as she is now. My mother would sit me on
her knee and tell me stories, and I would hold myself as still as a statue, bewitched by her tales.
“Long ago,” she always began, in a voice that was reserved only for when the moon was
rising, “I was a tiny jellied spawn no bigger than a pearl, floating in the earth’s great oceans. The
fish nibbled and swallowed my brothers and sisters up, snap, snap, snap, and I was left, coming
at last to rest on the pebbled shore of a beach. And that is how I came to have these,” she
would say, waving her hands in front of my face, so close that they skimmed my eyelashes and
all I could see was the thin layer of webbed skin between each finger. To my unprejudiced
four-year-old eyes, the webs were not a deformity: they were beautiful, useful, magical, and I
wished with all my heart that I could be like her, could be from the sea.
I take my eyes from the poor moth on the desk and look over Miss Stourbridge’s head to
the picture window that frames the sea beyond, and I remember anew that the sea surrounds us
here, like a comforting arm holding the world at bay. A feeling of calm settles over me. However
strange this woman is, whatever my job might entail, it was the right decision to come here, I
can feel it.
I had seen the advertisement in one of Mum’s ornithologi-cal magazines. Mum bought
them for the photographs. She particularly liked the close-ups of the birds’ eyes and feathers.
The magazines were littered throughout our house, spattered with drops of paint, pages ripped
out and twisted together into the vague forms of gulls and robins so that every surface was
covered in paper birds made of paper birds.
But the latest magazine had landed on the doormat, pris-tine and untouched, and when I
shook it from its clear plastic covering, it had fallen open on the ad.
PA required to assist lepidopterist. Must be able to start immedi-ately. Must not be
squeamish.
When I had written to ask for more information, the return address had intrigued me.
Dogger Bank House, Dohhalund.
Dohhalund. An unusual word, not English-sounding at all. A bit of research showed me
that it was a tiny island off the East Anglian coast, the long thin shape of it reminiscent of a fish
leaping out of the water. Its heritage was a mixture of English and Dutch. When I looked at it on
a map on my phone, it had seemed so small that I imagined you could walk its circumference in
only a few hours. I had tried to picture what kind of an island it would be: a cold, hard rock
grizzled with the droppings of thousands of seabirds, or a flat stretch of white sand,
waiting for
my footprints? Whatever it turned out to be, the isolation of it appealed to me.
Miss Stourbridge’s letters had been vague about the posi-tion she was offering, but she
did tell me, rather proudly, that the island had belonged to her family for hundreds of years.
While I wait, I look about the room, searching for photo-graphs, evidence of other people.
Where is her family now?
I shift my weight carefully from foot to foot and I glance at my watch. Two twenty-three.
Thirteen minutes. I wonder if I’m being paid to stand and do nothing. I look around the room.
Next to the desk is a large clear glass box. Inside hang rows and rows of cocoons of all different
shapes and sizes. One or two are twitching. I turn away with a sting of shame, feel-ing
somehow as if I’ve looked at something I shouldn’t have.
Over by the window, there is a huge black telescope on a stand. Unlike everything else
in this place, it looks very mod-ern. Next to it on the windowsill sits a battered pair of bin-oculars
on a worn leather strap.
Quietly I back toward the chaise longue in the corner and lower myself onto its tattered
silk cover. It’s the first time I’ve sat down in hours, and my body sings with relief. I edge my hand
into my pocket and pull out my phone. It’s switched off: the battery ran low somewhere off the
coast of Norfolk at around the same time that the signal disappeared. The lack of signal hadn’t
worried me: I’d been looking forward to charg-ing my phone when I arrived, tapping in Miss
Stourbridge’s Wi-Fi code, the friendly glow of my phone’s screen a com-fort in this new place.
I look around for an outlet in the room, and with a sudden slick shiver I find I can’t see
any. There must be electricity here, surely. But if not... Realization runs through me like a thrill: if
there’s no electricity in this house, there won’t be any Wi-Fi either. And with no signal, there’s no
way of contacting the outside world. No way for the outside world to contact me. The roar of the
sea appears to amplify through
I take my eyes from the poor moth on the desk and look over Miss Stourbridge’s head to
the picture window that frames the sea beyond, and I remember anew that the sea surrounds us
here, like a comforting arm holding the world at bay. A feeling of calm settles over me. However
strange this woman is, whatever my job might entail, it was the right de-cision to come here, I
can feel it.
I had seen the advertisement in one of Mum’s ornithologi-cal magazines. Mum bought
them for the photographs. She particularly liked the close-ups of the birds’ eyes and feathers.
The magazines were littered throughout our house, spattered with drops of paint, pages ripped
out and twisted together into the vague forms of gulls and robins so that every surface was
covered in paper birds made of paper birds.
But the latest magazine had landed on the doormat, pris-tine and untouched, and when I
shook it from its clear plastic covering, it had fallen open on the ad.
PA required to assist lepidopterist. Must be able to start immedi-ately. Must not be
squeamish.
When I had written to ask for more information, the return address had intrigued me.
Dogger Bank House, Dohhalund.
Dohhalund. An unusual word, not English-sounding at all. A bit of research showed me
that it was a tiny island off the East Anglian coast, the long thin shape of it reminiscent of a fish
leaping out of the water. Its heritage was a mixture of English and Dutch. When I looked at it on
a map on my phone, it had seemed so small that I imagined you could walk its circumference in
only a few hours. I had tried to picture what kind of an island it would be: a cold, hard rock
grizzled with the droppings of thousands of seabirds, or a flat stretch of white sand, waiting for
my footprints? Whatever it turned out to be, the isolation of it appealed to me.
Excerpted from The Women of Pearl Island by Polly Crosby, Copyright © 2021 by Polly Crosby. Published by
arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
Social Links:
Author Website
Twitter: @WriterPolly
Instagram: @ polly_crosby
Facebook: @pollycrosbyauthor
Goodreads
Author Bio:
Polly Crosby grew up on the Suffolk coast, and now lives deep in the Norfolk countryside. THE BOOK OF HIDDEN WONDERS was awarded runner up in the Bridport Prize's Peggy Chapman Andrews Award for a First Novel, and Polly also won Curtis Brown Creative's Yesterday Scholarship, which enabled her to finish the novel. She currently holds the Annabel Abbs Scholarship at the University of East Anglia, where she is studying part time for an MA in Creative Writing. THE WOMEN OF PEARL ISLAND is her second novel.
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