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by Katharine
Grant
In Katharine Grant's Sedition, four families decide
to prepare their daughters for the bridal market. They are newly-rich men
in late 17th-century London who know that class matters, and they are
determined that their daughters will marry into the upper echelons. They
decide to give a music recital where their daughters will play the
new-fangled piano and showcase their worth and wealth as prospective wives.
Having hit upon a plan, they employ a music teacher to turn their daughters
into accomplished musicians. Nearly every character in this book desires a
massive change in their lives and this stench of desperation seeps
throughout the book, with its dark, dirty, bat-infested music rooms and
dingy salons: everything is cheap and grubby.
Superficially, Sedition
is about unrequited love and sexual awakening, but in reality this is a
tale of silence and power, revenge, manipulation and a desire to get what
you want at any cost.
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