
The Wet Nurse's Tale
By Erica Eisdorfer
Subjects: Historical Fiction, Great Britain in fiction, Family secrets, Wet-nurses in fiction, Mothers and sons in fiction, Fiction, historical, Wet-nurses, London (england), fiction, Wet nurses in fiction, Family secrets in fiction, Mothers and sons, Wet nurses, Fiction, Mothers and sons, fiction, History
Description: Bright and clever with a sharp-tongued, adventurous heroine who offers a candid and often funny look at the business of nursing babies in Victorian England, this is a debut novel that will have everyone talking.Susan Rose isn't the average protagonist: she's scheming, promiscuous, plump, and she is also smart, funny, tender, and entirely lovable. Like many lower-class women of Victorian England, she was born into a world that offered very few opportunities for the poor and unlovely. But Susan is the kind of plucky heroine who seeks her fortune, and finds it . . . with some help from, well, her breasts. Susan, you see, is a professional wet nurse; she breast-feeds the children of wealthy women who can't or won't nurse their own babies.But when her own child is sold by her father and sent to a London lady who had recently lost a baby, Susan manages to convince his new foster mother, Mrs. Norbert, to hire her as a wet nurse. Once reunited with her son, Susan...
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