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Widowland

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

2023 Philip K. Dick Award Nominee

"A compulsive, terrifying read."—Kate Quinn, New York Times bestselling author of The Rose Code

For readers of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale comes a thrilling feminist dystopian novel set in an alternative history that terrifyingly imagines what a British alliance with Germany would look like if the Nazis had won WWII.

To control the past, they edited history. To control the future, they edited literature.

LONDON, 1953. Thirteen years have passed since England surrendered to the Nazis and formed a Grand Alliance with Germany. It was forced to adopt many of its oppressive ideologies, one of which was the strict classification of women into hierarchical groups based on the perceived value they brought to society.

Rose Ransom, a member of the privileged Geli class, remembers life from before the war but knows better than to let it show. She works for the Ministry of Culture, rewriting the classics of English literature to ensure there are no subversive thoughts that will give women any ideas.

Outbreaks of insurgency have been seen across the country with graffiti made up of seditious lines from forbidden works by women painted on public buildings. Suspicion has fallen on Widowland, the run-down slums where childless women over fifty have been banished. Rose is given the dangerous task of infiltrating Widowland to find the source of the rebellion before the Leader arrives in England for the Coronation ceremony of King Edward VIII and Queen Wallis.

Will Rose follow her instructions and uncover the criminals? Or will she fight for what she knows in her heart is right?

Praise for Widowland:

"A mind-bender of a novel about the power of literature to change minds. I loved it!" —Mark Sullivan, bestselling author of The Last Green Valley and Beneath a Scarlet Sky

"I rarely come across a book I can't put down but I devoured this one." —Rhys Bowen, New York Times bestselling author of two historical mystery series as well as several internationally bestselling historical novels

"An electrifying, Orwellian dystopia with a thrilling feminist twist." —Lara Prescott, New York Times bestselling author of The Secrets We Kept

"Tense, thought-provoking, and terrifying." —Natalie Jenner, international bestselling author of The Jane Austen Society and Bloomsbury Girls

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  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2022

      In 1943 Honolulu, cryptanalysist Isabel Cooper is concerned when the only other female codebreaker at Station Hypo goes missing; perhaps The Codebreaker's Secret is uncovered in 1965 when a rookie reporter and a crusty old-timer discover a skeleton near the ever-so-fancy Mauna Kea Beach Hotel in Ackerman's (75,000-copy paperback and 10,000-copy hardcover first printing). In Burton's The House of Fortune, a companion to the New York Times best-selling The Miniaturist, 18-year-old Thea Brandt hides out in 1700s Amsterdam's playhouses from her family's money quarrels, refusal to discuss her mother's death, and fear of the mysterious, soul-capturing Miniaturist (200,000-copy first printing). In Carey's 1950s Britain, ruled by a triumphant Reich that ranks women from the gorgeous (and advantaged) Gelis to those past childbearing good for domestic drudgery and living in Widowland, a Geli named Rose Ransom gets involved with subversion against the government. Narrated by a small-potatoes lesbian gossip columnist, Charyn's Big Red reimagines the entwined careers of Rita Hayworth and Orson Welles. With The Thread Collectors, debuter Edwards joins the USA TODAY best-selling Richman in a story paralleling New Orleans-based Black woman Stella, who embroiders intricate maps for enslaved men intending to flee and join the Union army, with New York-based white, Jewish, abolitionist Lily, who rolls bandages for Union soldiers and wants to join her husband fighting in Louisiana (125,000-copy paperback and 10,000-copy hardcover). In debuter Sivak's Mademoiselle Revolution, Sylvie de Rosiers, the biracial daughter of a rich white planter and an enslaved Black woman, flees her privileged life in Haiti during the revolution and ends up in Paris amid another revolution, befriending Robespierre and his strong-willed mistress, Corn�lie.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 15, 2022
      In this alternate history, Germany and Great Britain are 13 years into an alliance that began with the 1940 murder of George VI and his family in favor of the rule of Edward VIII, remorseless pawn of the Leader. Women are classified into six categories based on their usefulness to men and, by extension, the empire. Rose Ransom is a Geli, the most elite class of women, and has a job with the culture ministry editing literature of the past to match the current values of the regime. When inflammatory quotes from forbidden texts begin to appear as graffiti, she is asked to infiltrate a widowland community, where childless women over 50 are relegated and the insurgent messages appear to originate. The subversion must be stopped before the Leader arrives for the coronation of King Edward and Queen Wallis, and Rose is expected to act in the best interests of the protectorate. Carey builds a chillingly believable setting and society that feel relevant now. For fans of historical fiction, women's stories, and alternate history and for readers looking for The Handmaid's Tale by way of Fatherland.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 2022

      Carey, who writes the 1930s-set Agent Clara Vine books under the pen name Jane Thynne, publishes her first novel as C. J. Carey--a chilling thriller with an alternate-history twist. The setting is 1953 Nazi Britain, a country where information and women are categorized (from the beautiful and privileged to the barren and outcast) and controlled in equal measure. Rose Ransom, privileged as long as she cooperates with the subjugation of her country and herself, is employed to erase and sanitize both history and literature. She is radicalized in "Widowland," the slums that barely house those who have nothing left to lose. Seeing her future in their fate, she commits a desperate act to save her nation--if not herself. Rose seems at the top of her world, but the more time readers spend with her, the more her constant fear is exposed and her naivete stripped away. She's heroic and sympathetic, doing the best she can in hell. Her job of sanitizing and bowdlerizing the classics of literature will send shivers down the spine of any book lover. VERDICT Highly recommended.--Marlene Harris

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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