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Waiting at the Sliprails: Large Print Edition

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Waiting at the SliprailsSet in the upper Nepean River area of Australia, then on the Bathurst Road of New South Wales

Seeking acceptance but they discovered love and forgiveness.

Will love be found in a marriage of convenience?

*****

Bea Dawes is a foundling, alone and unloved. Her life seems to be one trauma after the other, ending up as a convict dairy maid in a penal colony half way around the world from where she was born.

Jack Barnes is escaping a home filled with hate and constant bickering. He seeks a wife but is not looking for love. He is hired as a drover, and meets Bea.

Bea accepts his offer of marriage; then discovers that he could be gone for months, leaving her alone with Billy and Netty. They are part of the tribe of Aborigines who live on his secluded farm. Bea learns to love her husband and also this wonderful aboriginal couple.

Then drought ravages the farm, and Jack must hit the long paddock with the flock. In his absence, a visitor arrives, threatening to destroy everything they have worked so hard for.

Can Bea touch this woman’s heart?

Will the drought ever end and when will Jack return? Will they realise feeling of love are stronger than either realised? Does she trust him?

*****
‘Waiting at the Sliprails’ is a colonial convict historical fiction story in the standalone ‘Convict Stain Collection’ that takes you back to a time when simply surviving was a battle won.

A Clean Historical Fiction Story

If you love Australian Colonial history, you will love Sara Powter’s ‘Waiting at the Sliprails’ an absorbing tale of love and survival in the face of adversity.

Buy ‘Waiting at the Sliprails’ to find out what occurs to bring the peace back to the valley.

320 pages, Paperback

Published January 10, 2024

24 people are currently reading
7 people want to read

About the author

Sara Powter

45 books15 followers
Sara was born on the NSW Central Coast. Her childhood was spent with her parents, mainly travelling up and down the East Coast of Australia, fishing, shell collecting and doing some of her education by Correspondence Schooling. With a passion for science, she worked for the Department of Agriculture as a Scientific Assistant in the Entomology Department. She married Stephen soon after leaving there, and they spent 30 years in Ministry in the Newcastle Anglican Diocese in NSW, only retiring at the end of 2020. When 'Covid 19' hit, time was available to pen some of the stories she'd wanted to write for some time. Within twelve months, eight stories were finished, and ideas for more were on the way. These stem from her passion for Colonial Australia, her convict Ancestors and the remarkable history of the amazing country, Australia! Sara wrote these as she wished to finish one of her mother's unfinished manuscripts.
The series prequel, "Dancing to her Own Tune", is now completed and ties in Sheila Hunter's Australian Trilogy with Sara's Lockley series.
Sara is currently working on her 13th story, but... Watch for more!
Cover Paintings are mostly by Joseph Lycett, an Early Colonial artist
(NB Sheila Hunter is Sara's mother)


FOLLOW ME ON
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https://partners.bookbub.com/authors/...
TWITTER
https://twitter.com/SaraPowter

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5 stars
64 (57%)
4 stars
33 (29%)
3 stars
11 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
9 reviews
January 20, 2024
Wonderful reading

Sara Powter is a great author. This was my second book by her and in this series to read. Her books are realistic, filled with true life feelings, without explicit details of sexual activity; they are enjoyable clean reading fiction. I find it hard to put her books down!
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Author 3 books3 followers
September 2, 2023
A delightful story that continues the stories of characters from other books and introduces new ones. Incredible descriptions of colonial life. This book will make you look for the next and the next to find out how the characters fare.
70 reviews6 followers
June 8, 2024
I loved it. It was such a sweet romance story about a convict girl being sent to Australia in the early 1800s & everything that happens to her.
7 reviews
November 28, 2024
Waiting at the Sliprails

A very easy book to read with lots hidden messages about life. Some good descriptions of early Australian farmers and their ingenuity and survival.
21 reviews1 follower
October 27, 2024
A beautiful story of the era where sometimes choices were made from convenience and companionship and as time passes true love grows even independently of each other. Life was hard in those days and they did what they could. With Sara's skilful writing the resolution and restoration is always a joy.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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