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Sophia Tobin

    Sophia Tobin se sumerge en el pasado, inspirada por su investigación sobre un artesano real del siglo XVIII. Su escritura explora las relaciones humanas y los secretos, a menudo ambientada en contextos históricos. El estilo de Tobin se caracteriza por ricas descripciones y profundidad psicológica, que atraen a los lectores a sus narrativas. Sus novelas plantean preguntas sobre la identidad, las expectativas sociales y las vidas ocultas.

    The Silversmith's Wife
    The Last Servant
    The vanishing
    A Map of the Damage
    • A Map of the Damage

      • 432 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      The brilliant new historical fiction from the acclaimed author of The Vanishing

      A Map of the Damage
    • The vanishing

      • 400 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      From the Sunday Times bestselling author of The Silversmith’s Wife comes an “undeniably page-turning (Daily Mail) novel: “Think Wuthering Heights or Jane Eyre, but ten times darker…as eerie and gothic as the Yorkshire Moors it is set on” (Stylist). On top of the Yorkshire Moors, in an isolated spot carved out of a barren landscape, lies White Windows, a house of shadows and secrets. Here lives Marcus Twentyman, a hard-drinking but sensitive man, and his sister, the brisk widow, Hester. When runaway Annaleigh first meets the Twentymans, their offer of employment and lodging seems a blessing. Only later does she discover the truth. But by then she is already in the middle of a web of darkness and intrigue, where murder seems the only possible means of escape… Stunning and vividly atmospheric, The Vanishing is thrilling historical fiction for fans of Sarah Waters and Tracy Chevalier.

      The vanishing
    • A story of intrigue and revenge, perfect for fans of Jane Eyre and Fingersmith, The Miniaturist and Burial Rites. On top of the Yorkshire Moors, in an isolated spot carved out of the barren landscape, lies White Windows, a house of shadows and secrets. Here lives Marcus Twentyman, a hard-drinking but sensitive man, and his sister, the brisk widow, Hester. When Annaleigh, a foundling who has fled her home in London, finds herself at the remote house, in service to the Twentymans, she discovers all is not as it seems behind closed doors. Isolated and lonely, Annaleigh is increasingly drawn to her master. And as their relationship intensifies, she soon realises that her movements are being controlled and her life is no longer her own. Slowly she is drawn into a web of intrigue and darkness, and soon she must face her fears if she is to save herself.

      The Last Servant