The Woman in the Green Dress by Tea Cooper
Synopsis /
1853 Mogo Creek, NSW
Della Atterton, bereft at the loss of her parents, is holed up in the place she loves best: the beautiful Hawkesbury in New South Wales. Happiest following the trade her father taught her, taxidermy, Della has no wish to return to Sydney. But the unexpected arrival of Captain Stefan von Richter on a quest to retrieve what could be Australia's first opal, precipitates Della's return to Sydney and her Curio Shop of Wonders, where she discovers her enigmatic aunt, Cordelia, is selling more than curiosities to collectors. Strange things are afoot and Della, a fly in a spider's web, is caught up in events with unimaginable consequences...
1919 Sydney, NSW
When London teashop waitress Fleur Richards inherits land and wealth in Australia from her husband, Hugh, killed in the war, she wants nothing to do with it. After all, accepting it will mean Hugh really is dead. But Hugh's lawyer is insistent, and so she finds herself ensconced in the Berkeley Hotel on Bent St, Sydney, the reluctant owner of a Hawkesbury property and an old curio shop, now desolate and boarded up.
As the real story of her inheritance unravels, Fleur finds herself in the company of a damaged returned soldier Kip, holding a thread that takes her deep into the past, a thread that could unravel a mystery surrounding an opal and a woman in a green dress; a green that is the colour of envy, the colour buried deep within an opal, the colour of poison...
My Thoughts /
The Woman in the Green Dress is the third novel I've read by Australian author, Tea Cooper that at its heart, is a story about the discovery of the first opal to be found in Australia. In terms of actual writing, I didn't think this story held up alongside her latest works; however, that's to be expected, as you would assume her writing, along with plot and storylines, would develop over time. Now, I'm not saying that The Woman in the Green Dress is subpar, because it's not - in any respect. I just found the writing lacked a little of the author's later finesse. But I'm just jabbering, so don't mind me.
In a genre jam packed to overfilling with WWII timelines, it's refreshing to find one up that goes back in time further, to the more neglected timeline of WWI.
The Woman in the Green Dress has two distinct timelines. 1853 Mogo Creek, New South Wales and 1919 Sydney. Notably, each timeline has a strong female protagonist and, each one has its own elements of mystery and collection of well-structured characters.
The story opens in London, it's early November of 1918. Fleur Richards is working as a waitress at a local teashop, and she's just been given the morning off - with pay. Armistice was signed early that morning with an order for any and all hostilities to cease on all fronts. After four years, fourteen weeks and two days of hell, the war was over. Just like that. Fleur heart bubbled with happiness, because with the end to the war, it meant that her husband, Hugh was coming back to her. All she had to do now, was wait for him to return home. Except, fate had other plans for Fleur. Waiting for her at home was a letter from the Ministry of Information: Dear Mrs Richards, I have information regarding your husband, Corporal Hugh Richards.
Taking a further step back in time, is the parallel storyline of Della Atterton.
Sydney, NSW, 1853 - after 265 days aboard ship Captain Stefan von Richter stepped off the gangplank and onto Australian soil. Travelling as the envoy to Baron Charles von Hugel, he has been assigned the task of transcribing the Baron's copious journal entries and reworking his notebooks to ready them for publication. As part of his assignment, Stefan intends to explore the Hawkesbury district, spending time cataloguing its remarkable flora and fauna. He also has a more private reason for travelling to Australia. To locate the whereabouts of a precious stone called an opal. While checking in to the Berkeley Hotel, a flyer caught his eye - Visitors to Sydney should not leave without calling upon The Curio Shop of Wonders at 84 Hunter Street.
Mogo Creek, and Della Atterton sewed animal hides for her Pa's shop in Sydney. Now her Ma and Pa were gone, and no one ever came to visit, except for hunters Gus and Dobbin, who brought monthly supplies and more skins for her to sew. Since her parent's death, Della couldn't bring herself to work in her father's Taxidermy shop in Sydney, so her Aunt Cordelia cared for it, reporting back by letter sent with Gus and Dobbin. Della's world is turned on its head when she receives a visit from Captain Stefan von Richter with not so good news from Sydney.
The story meanders between timelines much like the Hawkesbury River, flowing steadily onwards until it reaches its destination. Once again, Tea Cooper's meticulous research and writing abilities make this novel come to life. With strong, colourful protagonists and lots of interesting secondary characters to cheer or jeer. How does an opal connect these two timelines? A mysterious and intriguing hidden family secret adds a certain amount of interest to the plot which was very much welcomed.
Plus, learning about taxidermy in the 1850's……very, very interesting!