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The Vanishing Point by Mary Sharratt
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The Vanishing Point (edition 2006)

by Mary Sharratt

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2267119,035 (3.86)13
Good historical fiction. More romance than action -- i.e. all action is propelled by emotion and personal decisions. Emotions always conflicted, providing the tension. This would appeal to people who enjoy historical fiction and romances. A cut above the typical book of either genre.
1 vote bjellis | Jan 25, 2015 |
Showing 7 of 7
Good historical fiction. More romance than action -- i.e. all action is propelled by emotion and personal decisions. Emotions always conflicted, providing the tension. This would appeal to people who enjoy historical fiction and romances. A cut above the typical book of either genre.
1 vote bjellis | Jan 25, 2015 |
Hannah Powers is a young English woman whose father has trained her in his medical practice. Her sister May enjoys the company of many different men, and is eventually betrothed to the son of a distant relative in the Virginia colony. Eventually May's letters stop, and Hannah finds herself en route after her sister. When she makes her way to where her sister was supposed to live, she finds her husband Gabriel, a run down house, and no sign of May whatsoever.
Hannah soon discovers that her beloved sister is dead... and she has fallen in love with her brother in law. However, May's spectre never leaves them. Hannah continues to question what happened to May and will not stop until she knows for certain.
I loved the touches of folk magic Sharratt added to the story along with the herbalism. One big historical error though, binominal nomenclature (aka the Latin name for living things) was not developed until the 18th century. I didn't mind though.
The story is very nicely written and paced. Certainly worth your time, and I cannot wait to get hold of more of Sharratt's work. ( )
  quantumbutterfly | Jan 12, 2010 |
I really enjoyed this book. I didn't want to put it down! It is full of sadness & the ending is quite sad, but the book itself is full of mystery & makes u want to read more & more! Would definitely recommend! ( )
  Ames3473 | Nov 28, 2009 |
1670s America was an untamed wilderness, and May and Hannah Powers both find that out the hard way when May sails to the Maryland area to marry a distant cousin, having ruined her good name in England because of her sexual escapades, and Hannah follows 2 years later. This is a beautifully written book with enough suspense, love, betrayal, and revenge to keep you on the edge of your seat. Good attention to detail as far as the time period and a great ending (but not necessarily the ending you want). Highly recommended to all fans of historical fiction. ( )
  CatieN | Nov 3, 2008 |
I had to read this novel for a book group, but I'm afraid I could not suspend my disbelief in what seems to be a major historical error on which the entire plot hinges. Oddly, I can't find a single review that mentions this error. Not the mainly positive reader reviews, nor the middling review given it by _Publishers Weekly_.

Hannah follows her sister to America after her fairly religious father's death. May had been sent there in a sort of disgrace to marry the son of an extremely religious cousin. Once there, Hannah finds that her sister is apparently dead. She falls for her brother-in-law, gets involved with him sexually, and wants to marry him. Then she learns she should question what really happened to her sister.

Okay, even leaving aside the question of consanguinity and exactly how closely related the British family was to their cousins in America, what about the question of affinity?! My understanding is that under canon law, as soon as May married Gabriel, he was off limits to Hannah forever. (See Deceased Wife's Sister's Marriage Act of 1907 that lifted the ban under British marriage law.)

If any character, at any time in the novel, had referred to the impediment, giving the lead characters a chance to proclaim why they didn't care that they were breaking canon law, I could've accepted it and moved on. However, we're given no reason to believe that the laws of affinity popped into anyone's mind. Ever.

I know this novel is popularly lauded, but I can't jump on that bandwagon when an apparent historical error is central to the author's plot. Sorry.
2 vote ReneeMarie | May 31, 2008 |
In her latest novel, The Vanishing Point, Mary Sharratt transports readers back to Colonial America, a land filled with impenetrable forests, grim foreboding and long distances between neighbors. It is the wilderness within the hearts of the characters, however, that proves to be the most dangerous.

As she did in her previous book, The Real Minerva, Sharratt brings the hair-trigger emotions of her characters to the surface as they play out the drama against the backdrop of history. In The Real Minerva, it was 1920s Minnesota; here, we’re taken to Maryland in the 1690s.

Hannah Powers arrives on the wild, rocky shores of the Maryland colony, hoping to join her older sister May and her new husband Gabriel. May had left Hannah and their father, a surgeon, back in England several years earlier in the wake of scandal. We learn that May “had started with the boys” when she was fifteen. “In the beginning, she had tried to be a decent girl, contenting herself with kisses, sweet words, and secret glances. But her hunger mounted…”

Before she can bring disgrace on the family name, May’s father sends her to America as a sort of mail-order bride for a distant cousin. Years later, Hannah arrives and makes her way up-river to the isolated homestead where May and Gabriel had settled. But before she can drag her trunks up the riverbank, she’s greeted with terrible news from Gabriel: two years earlier, May died in childbirth and the farm has fallen into ruins.

At first, Gabriel is hostile and guarded, carrying a load of bitterness toward the rest of the world, but it’s not long before Hannah penetrates his stoic, buckskinned exterior. A few chapters later, they’re embracing and tumbling around in animal skins on the cabin floor. Though it’s predictable and a bit quick to develop, the romance between Gabriel and Hannah is genuinely felt by the reader. As the novel progresses, it becomes the source of tension that keeps the pages turning: even as Hannah falls in love with her brother-in-law, she increasingly suspects him of murdering her sister.

Sharratt limits most of the novel’s action to the isolated cabin, forcing us to feel the loneliness, the danger of the wilderness, the gritty way of life. The sex is dirty (in the unwashed sense), yet erotic; the mystery of the missing woman constantly haunts the edge of the pages; and the violence of mankind is always just beyond the threshold.

The strength of the novel lies in its details—food, clothing, gardening, medicinal herbs and ocean crossings are well-researched; a description of surgery to remove a kidney stone is especially vivid. I’ve no idea how accurate Sharratt’s descriptions are, but the important thing is she convinces me and integrates the research seamlessly into the story.

The Vanishing Point has the hallmarks of a successful historical novel—it’s engaging, authentic in its period details, sexy when it needs to be, and is populated with characters the reader cares about. Despite its length, The Vanishing Point quickly becomes a page-turner and its flaws—primarily clunky dialogue which teeters between Restoration England and 20th-century TV soap opera—are easy to forgive once you get caught up in the story.

Hannah grows stronger as the story moves along (it’s no coincidence that her last name is Powers). Sharratt has endowed her with the trademarks of a spirited, educated woman who can read and write in English and Latin, knows algebra, geometry, botany, and astronomy, and wields a surgeon’s knife with precision.

Years before the American Revolution, Hannah takes her own stance of independence. She’s a formidable, and sometimes threatening, match for Gabriel as she plays detective in the mystery of her sister’s death. The solution, not fully revealed until the book’s closing pages, is as surprising as it is satisfying.

In her Afterword, Sharratt tells us the seeds of The Vanishing Point were planted 20 years ago when she took part in a University of Minnesota seminar called “The Making of the Female Character (1450-1650).” Sharratt wondered, “What would happen to a late-seventeenth-century woman who was determined to carve out her own destiny and who demanded the same liberties, both social and sexual, as a man?” She more than adequately answers this question in the pages of The Vanishing Point. ( )
  davidabrams | Jul 27, 2006 |
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