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2 References  














The Tea Rose







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Tea Rose is a historical fiction novel by Jennifer Donnelly. It is the first book of a trilogy about London's East End at the turn of the 19th century. It was first published October 1, 2002 by Thomas Dunne Books, an imprint of St. Martin's Press.[1]

Summary[edit]

In London in 1888, 17-year-old Fiona Finnegan, daughter of Irish immigrants Paddy and Kate, works under William Burton, owner and founder of Burton Tea. Paddy works as a docker in Whitechapel and is later called upon to lead the dockers to support labour unions. Fiona and her childhood sweetheart, Joe Bristow, remain hopeful that they will be able start their own grocery shop with the money that they save until Joe is tricked into marrying Fiona's rival, Millie Peterson. Soon after, her father is killed by slipping on grease and falling from a building window. Her mother is forced to move her children from their childhood home without her husband's wages to support them. She is later murdered by Jack the Ripper when she finds him murdering her neighbor. Struck with grief at his mother's death, Fiona's younger brother Charlie runs away and is found dead in the Thames. Fiona and her little brother Seamie are taken in by their family friend, Roddy O'Meara, who lived with them in the previous home. In an attempt to receive compensation for her father's death, Fiona goes to William Burton's office. Instead, she overhears Burton and Bowler Sheehan, a harsh criminal, discussing Paddy's murder by Sheehan. Fiona flees, not realizing she took five hundred pounds in notes from Burton's desk. With Seamie in tow, Fiona flees London. When she flees, she met someone name Nick Soames, and they pretended to be a couple due to the fact Fiona could not get a ticket for her and Seamie. When she goes to America, she has a quest to find her uncle Michael, who was also a shop owner. When she finds him, he is drunk because his wife had died from cholera, and he could not take care of his daughter, Nell. Fiona tells him to stop drinking and move on, but he can't. Michael was in debt with the bank and had to close his shop, but Fiona decides to open it up and start business along with the help of their neighbors.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Tea Rose". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 6 August 2015.


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    Categories: 
    2002 American novels
    American historical novels
    Novels set in London
    Fiction set in 1888
    Novels set in the 1880s
    Novels set in Victorian England
    Thomas Dunne Books books
    2000s historical novel stubs
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles needing additional references from January 2017
    All articles needing additional references
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