"On St. Valentine's Day, 1865, the paddle steamer Laurentia, Captain Donald McDonough commanding, left the Inman Line wharf in East Boston bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Liverpool. Her sailing day was a Tuesday as usual. . . . ""
A s the Laurentia makes her stately passage across the gray Atlantic, the passengers are left to their own devices to fill the thirteen days until they reach England's shores. They will form alliances, make enemies, negotiate deals, and swindle, seduce, and betray one another--all while upholding the strictest standards of nineteenth-century decorum.
The diverse passenger list Arthur and Olivia Crichton--a middle-aged businessman and his beautiful, much younger wife, a couple trying to believe that they are happy The Reverend Stibbards--a clergyman with an unusually secular appreciation of the female passengers Mrs. Stewart--a widow of obvious charms but rather uncertain means Charles Stuart--a black entertainer, held prisoner in his cabin, hoping to find tolerance in the great capitals of Europe Major Cutler--a bigoted card player with a loaded pistol at his side John Bonney--a mysterious young man, standing at the rail in all weather, his eyes never leaving the receding American shore
But people are rarely what they seem . . .
For fans of Upstairs Downstairs and A Room with a View, The Great Circle--literate, sophisticated, colorfully cast--is an unforgettable window into a world gone by, yet one whose themes of love and happiness and the ways to live a life of integrity are timeless.
Peter Prince is a British novelist. He was born in England and studied in America. His first novel Play Things won the Somerset Maugham Award in 1973. He won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing in a Limited Series or a Special for his work on the 1980 BBC miniseries Oppenheimer.