Cleverly, yet subtly, the author marks the extra burdens that women had to bear in a society that was fair to few of its subjects. Frances Temple's The Ramsay Scallop and Karen Cushman's Catherine, Called Birdie are recent novels that offer a view of the Middle Ages from the female perspective, but this story adds a dimension by populating its world primarily with women, including a band of renegade nuns. Agnes is also the mother of a young outlaw named Robert, who Marian dislikes at first sight. Among them is the girl's former nurse, Agnes, whose commonsense and prowess at healing has earned her the mantle of Forestwife-the wise woman people come to when they are in dire need. Rather than marry an elderly widower who stinks of ale, 15-year-old Marian runs away to join the forest folk, who live by their own rules. Using the Robin Hood legends as a springboard, Tomlinson heads deep into the heart of the forest, but the hero of this story is not the prince of thieves rather, it is Marian, who becomes the benevolent Green Lady of the forest. Jacket illustration copyright © Dennis Nolan. The Forestwife, by Theresa Tomlinson The Forestwife by Theresa Tomlinson jacket illustration by Dennis Nolan
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