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Polsinney Harbour
***Pearce's simply sketched characters and neatly tucked plots can often take on a Hardyesque solidity from her empathic reach into period mores and her sparse, evocative landscapes: in this tale, set in a 19th-century Cornish fishing village, there's a warming May/December marriage, passion nobly sublimated to wider loyalties, and a splendidly sacrificial demise.*** Maggie Care, 19, dusty and bareheaded, walks down over the moor track to the village of Polsinney, finding a bit of work with sharp-tongued widow Rachel Tallack, whose main source of income is from the sea. Rachel's son Brice is skipper of a fishing boat, still owned, to Rachel's disgust, by her brother-in-law - crippled, dying, bad-tempered Gus Tallack. Maggie is a good worker, quiet, though willing to tell little, of a father, brother, and fiance drowned at sea. And her secret soon becomes obvious: Maggie is...
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