User:Mightysmoll/sandbox/The Secret Woman

= The Secret Woman = The Secret Woman is a Gothic romance and suspense novel written by Eleanor Hibbert under the pseudonym Victoria Holt. It was originally published in 1970 and is considered to be a bestseller. Set in 1887, it chronicles Anna Brett’s scandalous romance with the married ship captain Redvers Stretton. As they sail across the South Seas, tensions build among Anna, Redvers, and everyone else onboard The Serene Lady, and a mystery involving murder, the destruction of ship called The Secret Woman, and a missing fortune of diamonds begins to unravel.

Plot summary
Anna Brett was born in India, due to her father being in the Indian Army, and when she was about eight years old her parents moved her to live in Langmouth, England with her Aunt Charlotte into what is referred to as the Queen’s House. While in Langmouth, Anna was educated and began to learn the ways of Aunt Charlotte’s antique business as she grew up.

On one autumn night, a sailor named Redvers Stretton comes to see Anna and their romantic interest in each other starts to grow. As Aunt Charlotte grows older and weaker, she hires a nurse, Chantel Loman, to look after her. Chantel seems to brighten up the normally dreary Queen’s House and quickly becomes close friends with Anna. Then one morning, Chantel finds Charlotte dead from an opium tablet overdose. Because she would have benefited from Charlotte’s death, people suspect Anna of killing her aunt, but Chantel successfully defends her and the death is declared a suicide. Chantel takes up a position at the nearby Castle Crediton, caring for Monique Stretton, the wife of Redvers that Anna had not previously known about. Anna discovers she inherited serious debts from Aunt Charlotte and decides to sell her antique furniture and rent out the Queen’s House. During her time at the castle Chantel and Rex Crediton, Redvers’ half-brother, begin spending a lot of time together. She finds out that Rex and Monique are going to sail on Redvers’ ship The Serene Lady to Australia and Monique’s home island of Coralle. Chantel helps get Anna hired as Red’s son Edward’s governess while they are away.

During the voyage, Edward gets drugged and Anna suspects someone onboard had been planning on throwing him overboard, but most of the passengers assume it was just a prank. Once the ship arrives on the island of Coralle, Red declares his love to Anna and gives her a letter asking for her to wait to be with him just before he departs.

There is an increasing sense of tension and doom during Anna and Chantel’s two month stay on the island; Monique grows more and more distraught and angry over the thought that Red doesn’t love her, and Anna finds out that Chantel had married Rex before they set sail. Upon The Serene Lady’s return, Chantel gives Anna a long letter explaining that she had been plotting to take over Castle Crediton and that she had in fact been responsible for Aunt Charlotte’s death. In order for Chantel and Rex to inherit the castle and the family riches, both Red and Edward would have to be dead, so Chantel had drugged Edward on the ship in an attempt to kill him, but the plan failed. Then, on Coralle, Chantel had poisoned some coffee Monique was going to give Red in order to frame his wife for his murder, but Chantel accidentally drinks the coffee herself and dies.

Anna returns to England and continues to be Edward’s governess until he begins attending school. She then returns to the Queen’s House and one of her maids informs her that Monique died on the island of Coralle. Red returns to England so that he and Anna can finally begin their life together.

Characters

 * Anna Brett – narrator and protagonist in her late 20s; heiress to Charlotte Brett’s antique business and governess to Redvers Stretton’s son Edward
 * Charlotte Brett – Anna’s spinster aunt; runs an antique business out of the Queen’s House
 * Redvers Stretton – sailor; captain of The Secret Woman and The Serene Lady; Anna’s love interest
 * Chantel Loman – Charlotte and Monique’s nurse; Anna’s closest friend
 * Rex Crediton – Redvers’ half-brother, heir to Lady Crediton’s business and riches; Chantel’s love interest
 * Monique Stretton – Redvers’ wife and Edward’s mother; a native of the island of Coralle

Publication
The first edition of The Secret Woman was published in the United States in 1970 by Doubleday & Company, Inc. in New York. Since its initial release several other versions of it have been made; the most recent publication was done by Sourcebooks Casablanca of Sourcebooks, Inc. in Naperville, Illinois in 2014.

Success
The Secret Woman is considered a bestseller of 1970, along with Erich Segal’s Love Story and John Fowles’ The French Lieutenant’s Woman. This trend of bestselling novels of the romance and historical fiction genres suggests a widespread interest in escapism—particularly through stories of love and settings of the past. This is perhaps due to the chaotic and rebellious nature of the early ‘70s in both the United States and Britain.

In the United States during this time, protests against the Vietnam War had grown considerably aggressive during the Nixon administration, the rights movements for marginalized groups were continuing on from their beginnings in the ‘60s, and dramatic events such as the Kent State shootings marked a period of civil unrest. Similarly, there was an air of protest in Britain at this time, including strikes in the wake of an economic crisis and the increasing popularity of second wave feminism which led to a particularly large protest at the Royal Festival Hall in 1970.

Hibbert’s brand of historical Gothic romance would have acted as a reprieve in the midst of these turbulent events. The Secret Woman’s success was likely also bolstered by the success of Hibbert’s previous novels such as Mistress of Mellyn and The Shivering Sands. The positive reception of these works eventually gave Hibbert the title of “Queen of Romantic Suspense” and driving the sales of Victoria Holt novels to over 56 million copies worldwide.