The Photographer's Wife Audiobook By Suzanne Joinson cover art

The Photographer's Wife

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The Photographer's Wife

By: Suzanne Joinson
Narrated by: Joan Walker
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About this listen

Jerusalem, 1920: in an already fractured city, 11-year-old Prudence feels the tension rising as her architect father launches an ambitious and wildly eccentric plan to redesign the Holy City by importing English parks to the desert.

Prue, known as the 'little witness', eavesdrops underneath the tables of tearooms and behind the curtains of the dance halls of the city's elite, watching everything but rarely being watched herself. Around her, British colonials, exiled Armenians and German officials rub shoulders as they line up the pieces in a political game: a game destined to lead to disaster.

When Prue's father employs a British pilot, William Harrington, to take aerial photographs of the city, Prue is uncomfortably aware of the attraction that sparks between him and Eleanora, the English wife of a famous Jerusalem photographer. And after Harrington learns that Eleanora's husband is a nationalist intent on removing the British, those sparks are fanned dangerously into a flame.

Years later, in 1937, Prue is an artist living a reclusive life by the sea with her young son when Harrington pays her a surprise visit. What he reveals unravels her world, and she must follow the threads that lead her back to secrets long ago buried in Jerusalem.

The Photographer's Wife is a powerful story of betrayal: between father and daughter, between husband and wife, and between nations and people, set in the complex period between the two world wars.

©2015 Suzanne Joinson (P)2016 Audible, Ltd
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Critic reviews

"A haunting, original and beautifully written tale." (Paul Torday, author of Salmon Fishing in the Yemen)
"A delicate yet gutsy spirit of adventure pervades its pages.... Joinson writes with a control and vivacity that fires our own dreams of flight." (Emylia Hall, author of The Book of Summers)

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What’s the point?

The story had such potential however the loose ends just stayed strayed and it was difficult to reconcile what the ending was. Why was this story told? What happened to everyone we met? If the end was better-the story would have been better. Why make us feel that utter tragedy so exquisitely only to have no outcome. It was strange. I’m not sure who the good guys were -or weren’t. Why did he give her the photos to hold on to? It just didn’t make sense. And what happened to her father? Anyway I enjoyed the story up til the end. Mostly because of the masterful narration by Joan Walker. She can read the phone book (do they still have those) and I would be enthralled!

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