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  1 The Visionist: A NOVEL
Author: Urquhart, Rachel
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3571.R
ISBN-13: 9780316228114
LCCN: 2013940557
Imprint: Little, Brown and Company
Pub Date: 01/14/2014
Availability: Out of Stock Indefinitely
List: $26.00
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 345 pages ; 25 cm H 9.625", W 6.375", D 1.125", 1.25 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Bibliographies: Fiction Core Collection, 18th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 19th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 20th ed.
Awards:
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Historical Fiction
Suspense/Thriller
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / Literary
FICTION / Historical / General
FICTION / Religious
LC Subjects: Abused children, Fiction
Arson, Fiction
Brothers and sisters, Fiction
Christian fiction
Historical fiction
Massachusetts, History, 19th century, Fiction
Shakers, Fiction
Visionaries, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Arson, Fiction
Child abuse, Fiction
Historical fiction
Massachusetts, History, 19th century, Fiction
Shakers, Fiction
Siblings, Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Publisher Annotations | 10/29/2013
An enthralling debut novel about a teenage girl who finds refuge--but perhaps not--in an 1840s Shaker community. In this exquisite, transporting debut, 15-year-old Polly Kimball sets fire to the family farm, killing her abusive father. She and her young brother find shelter in a Massachusetts Shaker community called The City of Hope. It is the Era of Manifestations, when young girls in Shaker enclaves all across the Northeast are experiencing extraordinary mystical visions, earning them the honorific of "Visionist" and bringing renown to their settlements. The City of Hope has not yet been blessed with a Visionist, but that changes when Polly arrives and is unexpectedly exalted. As she struggles to keep her dark secrets concealed in the face of increasing scrutiny, Polly finds herself in a life-changing friendship with a young Shaker sister named Charity, a girl who will stake everything--including her faith--on Polly's honesty and purity.
Journal Reviews
Booklist | 10/01/2013
Urquhart constructs this debut novel around a seminal era in Shaker history. Set in New England in the mid-nineteenth century during the "Era of Manifestations," this tale explores the often paradoxical nature of a zealously rigid and charismatic belief system. After setting fire to her family's farmhouse while her abusive father sleeps, 15-year-old Polly Kimball escapes with her mother and young brother in tow. Seeking refuge as indentured orphans in a Shaker community, Polly is mistakenly hailed as a "visionist," inflaming spiritual passions and arousing suspicions among various citizens of the City of Hope. As Polly attempts to guard her secret, a determined private investigator works behind the scenes to uncover the truth about the fire. Although the pacing is a bit plodding at times, the subject matter and the historical setting are compelling. Flanagan, Margaret. 352p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Kirkus Reviews | 04/15/2013
A historical novel set in 1840s Massachusetts intertwines the stories of a Shaker community, a world-weary fire inspector and a beleaguered farm family. Silas, a depraved drunken wastrel, has ruined the prosperous family farm once owned by his late father-in-law, who died suddenly and mysteriously. He wants to sell the land but must first get wife May out of the way. He makes the mistake of revealing his intent to teenage daughter Polly, whom he has been sexually abusing. Fearing for their lives, May, Polly and younger brother Ben (whom Silas had tried to drown in infancy) escape by night but not before Polly drops a lamp on the floor near the bed where her father lies in a stupor. Flames consume the farmhouse, but Polly thinks she sees Silas running into the yard as they flee. Miles away, May indentures her children to be raised by the Shakers, a celibate Christian community, and disappears. Simon, a private detective in the employ of (and, due to a tragic childhood incident, lifelong thrall to) Hurlbut, a wealthy bully, is sent to sift through the ashes. Suspecting foul play after he finds Silas' body some distance from the charred ruins, Simon reports the conflagration as accidental because a lengthy inquest would thwart Hurlbut's speedy acquisition of the property. Racked with guilt over her role in the fire, and cut off from Ben by the Shakers' strict segregation of the sexes, Polly finds comfort in the Shakers' carefully ordered, self-sustaining way of life and a form of kinship with her roommate, Sister Charity. When Polly, in a trance, summons imaginary angel companions, the community reveres her as a mystic or "Visionist." As Urquhart explores the various enslavements that bind all of the characters, Simon's investigation becomes a high-stakes race against time. The plot is burdened by too many narrators and too much Shaker minutia. Nevertheless, Urquhart's fine craftsmanship covers a multitude of sins. An impressive debut. 336pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Library Journal | 08/01/2013
This debut novel draws the reader into the strange and mystical world of the Shakers. Following a devastating fire, May Kimball indentures her two children, Ben and Polly, to a Shaker community in 1840s Massachusetts. While attempting to cover devastating secrets, Polly is revered as a "visionist," develops a close but uneasy friendship with Sister Charity, and draws the suspicion of Elder Sister Agnes. Meanwhile, a fire inspector with secrets of his own investigates the fire at the Kimball farm and gets drawn into the family's misfortunes. Urquhart's research provides fascinating details about Shaker beliefs and practices, and she deftly displays how human nature will break out even where attempts are made to suppress it in favor of a "pure" life. The alternating chapters involving Simon Pryor's investigation of the fire mesh somewhat uneasily with the rest of the story, as they impose a few too many plot contrivances on a story about the nature of faith and sin. VERDICT For historical fiction fans wanting to immerse themselves in a setting they may know little about, this novel fits the bill. Christine DeZelar-Tiedman, Univ. of Minnesota Libs., Minneapolis. 352p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Library Journal Prepub Alert | 07/29/2013
After torching the family farm to be rid of her abusive father, 15-year-old Polly Kimbal settles with her brother at an 1840s Massachusetts Shaker community called the City of Hope. She's then the first at the community to have the mystical visions experienced by girls at Shaker communities countrywide and must struggle to keep her past actions secret. The granddaughter of screenwriter Sidney Howard (Gone with the Wind), Urquhart vacationed with her family at a Shaker Meeting House he had bought and subsequently became intrigued with the community. A big push at BEA. 352p. LJ Prepub Alert Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 07/08/2013
Urquhart has written for Vogue and Allure, yet her debut historical novel features writing of a more restrained sort. Set in 1842 in a small enclave in Massachusetts called City of Hope, the slow-to-build narrative takes a jarring peek into the segregated Shaker way of life where the "wicked ways of the World" are shunned. Told from three disparate but oddly similar-sounding points of view--teenage Polly, who burned down the family farm to escape her father's sexual abuse; Simon Pryor, a private investigator and "expert in incendiaries" hired to get to the bottom of the crime by a wealthy entrepreneur interested in the land; and Sister Charity, a particularly prim and self-effacing member of the covenant who watches over Polly after she and her brother are dumped there by their fleeing mother--conventional cultlike behavior and the espousing of Shaker beliefs ("flesh bonds are forged in the fires of carnal sin") abounds. Though Polly's christening as a "Visionist" soon brings notoriety to the community and Pryor's ardent quest to uncover the truth about who set the blaze barrels closer to resolution, the temperature of the increasingly intertwined plot fails to rise above a simmer despite some well-placed twists. Think a cadre of easily provoked characters held back by unquestioning faith--but in need of Waco's fireworks. (Jan. 14). 352p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
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Review Citations
New York Times Book Review | 01/26/2014