The Welsh Fasting Girl
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Praise for the Previous Novels of Varley O’Connor
“Thoroughly researched and lively.” —Vogue
“Elegantly wrought, hardheaded, and tenderhearted.” —Michael Chabon
“Honesty and compassion inform every page, and there are passages so musical and full of grace they read like hymns. Reading groups should rejoice.” —Sigrid Nunez
“[O’Connor] captures the dangerous intersection between private life and the forces of history . . . and gives the reader that rare pleasure of inhabiting another family life that feels at once entirely familiar and new.” —Susan Richards Shreve
Twelve-year-old Sarah Jacob was the most famous of the Victorian fasting girls, who claimed to miraculously survive without food, serving as flashpoints between struggling religious, scientific, and political factions. In this novel based on Sarah’s life and premature death from what may be the first documented case of anorexia, an American journalist, recovering from her husband’s death in the Civil War, leaves her home and children behind to travel to Wales, where she investigates Sarah’s bizarre case by becoming the young girl’s friend and confidante. Unable to prevent the girl’s tragic decline while doctors, nurses, and a local priest keep watch, she documents the curious family dynamic, the trial that convicted Sarah’s parents, and an era’s hysterical need to both believe and destroy Sarah’s seemingly miraculous power.
Intense, dark, and utterly compelling, The Welsh Fasting Girl delves into the complexities of a true story to understand how a culture’s anxieties led to the murder of a child.
Varley O’Connor is the author of five novels, including The Welsh Fasting Girl, The Master’s Muse, and The Cure. She lives in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Set in the 1860s, this moving novel from O'Connor (Like China) exhumes the tragic mystery of a famous child who claims not to need nourishment. Journalist Christine Thomas crosses the Atlantic to escape the stagnation of her life in New York and to judge for herself the veracity of claims about the Welsh Fasting Girl. Twelve-year-old Sarah Jacobs had reportedly not eaten in 16 months out of her own volition, which some claim serves as proof of divine intervention in a politically, economically, and religiously divisive time in Wales. What begins as Christine's quest to sort fact from fiction becomes a struggle for justice on Sarah's behalf, both before and after the girl's highly publicized death. The narrative combines Christine's journals, contemporaneous reports (real and fictitious) by experts and journalists, and the remembrances of Sarah's youngest sister, Margaret. O'Connor's description of Sarah's condition and Christine's motivations as a concerned mother are highlights, even as the book's latter half hinges on the minutiae of inconsistent reports from Sarah's doctors and repetitive reinterpretations of the last days of Sarah's life. Although hampered by a sluggish plot, O'Connor's bleak, powerful story serves as an affecting homage to a girl whose community failed to protect her.