Seemly Justice

Mystery & Suspense, Historical Mystery
Cover of the book Seemly Justice by Lee Johnston, Lee Johnston
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Author: Lee Johnston ISBN: 9780993871924
Publisher: Lee Johnston Publication: September 5, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Lee Johnston
ISBN: 9780993871924
Publisher: Lee Johnston
Publication: September 5, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Praise for Seemly Justice

In her novella, SEEMLY JUSTICE, contemporary author, Lee Anne Johnston, is the Jane Austen of Upper Canada. She has penned a narrative of Victorian propriety and domestic violence, dipped her metaphorical quill in indelible ink. Here, she writes with the voice of a historical poet and her 19th century women are beautifully rendered: angry while socially restrained. An early feminist, her Penelope Clearwater, refuses family abuse, practices instead quiet justice, as well as the ministry of medicine and healing in the Christian charity of the day.

In a sequel, THE POISONED GIFT, Penelope appears in another gripping novella. As a doctor’s wife--again based in Galt, an industrial town in southwestern Ontario--she serves as a nurse whose sensible shoes are mired in a mystery involving the poisoning of a child and subsequent assault on Mrs. Smythe, the child’s mother. Through the events of this narrative Penelope is able to assuage a guilty conscience and heal feminine insecurities. The story moves as quickly as the Grand River on which it is set despite the rigid protocol of upper class Victorian religious and cultural mores. Johnston’s command of the diction, class structure, costume, and architecture of the day are so convincing it is as though she has snapped a shutter on detailed Daguerreotypes of decorum and violence in this early Canadian life.

In another period piece, MY WAR, Alice Cunningham is a WWII nurse who migrates from Galt to London, England. Johnston weaves vivid details of a war hospital and the brutal effects of battle on both Canadian and British health, culture and ethics. As in the first two stories, many of her women are early feminists and healers. Some rise while others fall, as a result of the social and medical mania of world war: its romance and blood, drama and horror.

- April Bulmer, author of Women of the Cloth (poems published by Black Moss Press, Windsor, Ontario, 2013)

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Praise for Seemly Justice

In her novella, SEEMLY JUSTICE, contemporary author, Lee Anne Johnston, is the Jane Austen of Upper Canada. She has penned a narrative of Victorian propriety and domestic violence, dipped her metaphorical quill in indelible ink. Here, she writes with the voice of a historical poet and her 19th century women are beautifully rendered: angry while socially restrained. An early feminist, her Penelope Clearwater, refuses family abuse, practices instead quiet justice, as well as the ministry of medicine and healing in the Christian charity of the day.

In a sequel, THE POISONED GIFT, Penelope appears in another gripping novella. As a doctor’s wife--again based in Galt, an industrial town in southwestern Ontario--she serves as a nurse whose sensible shoes are mired in a mystery involving the poisoning of a child and subsequent assault on Mrs. Smythe, the child’s mother. Through the events of this narrative Penelope is able to assuage a guilty conscience and heal feminine insecurities. The story moves as quickly as the Grand River on which it is set despite the rigid protocol of upper class Victorian religious and cultural mores. Johnston’s command of the diction, class structure, costume, and architecture of the day are so convincing it is as though she has snapped a shutter on detailed Daguerreotypes of decorum and violence in this early Canadian life.

In another period piece, MY WAR, Alice Cunningham is a WWII nurse who migrates from Galt to London, England. Johnston weaves vivid details of a war hospital and the brutal effects of battle on both Canadian and British health, culture and ethics. As in the first two stories, many of her women are early feminists and healers. Some rise while others fall, as a result of the social and medical mania of world war: its romance and blood, drama and horror.

- April Bulmer, author of Women of the Cloth (poems published by Black Moss Press, Windsor, Ontario, 2013)

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