Engaging, Enchanting, Riveting!
Echo Heron brings Clara Driscoll to life in this wonderful historical novel of turn of the century New York City! Brimming with historical details of the artistic world of Louis Comfort Tiffany's stained glass company, and the people behind the famous name. Without Clara and her Tiffany Girls, his company would have disappeared into anonimity, as did these women and their role in his success, until 21st Century scholars finally brought their story into the light. It is a story of tyranny, terror, opression, and injustice for women. These women were pioneers in the movement away from Victorian Era attitudes, morals, values, and laws regarding women; they faced an uphill battle for women's rights for suffrage, recognition, equal pay, and control of their intellectual, as well as physical property, not to mention their own bodies! Sadly, it is a fight women are still embroiled in today. But satisfying in that Clara Driscoll, and her "family circle" of artists and friends, has finally been brought out of the long shadow cast by Louis Comfort Tiffany, and now stands on their own, in the light of her remarkable accomplishments! I simply could not put it down. I fell in love with this book, and feel as if I've lost a good friend since I finished it. Kudos, Ms. Heron!