The Linnet Bird: A Novel (77 page)

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Authors: Linda Holeman

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M
Y BOOK ON
the medicinal plants of India, the book I began compiling when I first arrived back in England, using the case of notes I had collected over my years in India, is complete. It shall be published within a few months by Carruthers of London. Although I am known as Linny Ingram here, I put the name Linnet Gow on the book. The publisher strongly suggested that I use as the author name “A Lady”—which they prefer, or secondly, Mrs. Somers Ingram. Of course I think of myself as neither.

I wrote back that I would like it published under the name I originally indicated—Linnet Gow. They politely resisted, suggesting L. Gow.

I replied in my finest hand, stating that I insist on my choice; with all respect, I do insist.

They will come around to my bidding, of course, for I have never been one to back down. And no matter what names have been appointed, I will forever continue to think of myself as Linny Gow, the name my mother gave me, and the only name of which I am proud.

 

 

Acknowledgments

 
 
I
AM GREATLY INDEBTED
to my agent, Sarah Heller, for all her help with this project. I would like to thank Harriet Evans, for her instinct and her insight and her questions, and for pushing me to go further and dig deeper. She truly was instrumental in helping me make this book as close as possible to the one I envisioned. Heartfelt thanks to Catherine Cobain and Hazel Orme, and, of course, I owe much gratitude to Rachel Kahan. I must also thank Shannon Kernaghan, Donna Freeman, Irene Williams, Anita Jewell, and Kathy Lowinger, who read the manuscript in its original form and encouraged me. Last, I thank my children, Zalie, Brenna, and Kitt, for their understanding and constant support. No matter how difficult the journey, they are always willing companions.

 

 

About the Author

 
L
INDA
H
OLEMAN
is the author of two collections of short stories,
Flying to Yellow
and
Devil’s Darning Needle,
as well as several books for young adults, including
Search for the Moon King’s Daughter
and
Mercy’s Birds
. She lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

 

 

a novel

 
 

LINDA HOLEMAN

 

A Reader’s Guide

 

 

 

About the Book

 

Not since
The Far Pavilions
has an historical novel captured the imagination of its readers on such a showstopping scale.
The Linnet Bird
is the tale of Linny Gow: orphan, widow, mother, adventurer. Shackled by a reprehensible past, yet determined to rediscover her own dignity in the anonymity of a foreign nation, Linny braves a deadly ocean voyage—only to discover that her dark history cannot be outrun.

Gritty, provocative, and lushly imagined, Linny’s heartrending story carries her from the gruesome poverty of working-class Liverpool in the thick of the Industrial Revolution to the multi-hued pageantry of India under British rule. As she quests for the elusive means to healing and freedom, Linny must lie, cheat, beg, fight—even murder—in order to survive. Yet it is a chance encounter with a dangerous stranger that unclenches Linny’s pockmarked heart and fuels her ultimate transformation.

This unforgettable saga explores the back-alley depravity of child prostitution and the sociopolitical hypocrisy of colonial India with equal panache—while sensitively evoking the inner thought processes of its unforgettable heroine. The following guide is designed to help direct your group’s discussion of Linda Holeman’s masterpiece,
The Linnet Bird
.

 

Questions for Discussion

 

1. When Ram coerces Linny into working with the excuse, “Many a lass does help out her family when they’ve fallen on hard times,” Linny reflects that her bloodline elevates her above this:
“Of course I knew a number of the older girls . . . who worked a few hours now and then . . . when money was short at home. But I had always known I was different. I wasn’t like them . . . It was in my blood, this difference”
. Where does Linny get this notion of inherited superiority? What later event marks her first doubt about the legitimacy of her noble blood?

2. After a fruitless visit from the Ladies of Righteous Conduct, Linny reflects
“I turned thirteen and knew I had grown hard. And I knew my mother would not be pleased—not because I was a whore, for that was not my fault—but because of my evil ways and my even more evil thoughts”
. What is this evil she is talking about? What attempt does she make to rectify her ways?

3. What subversive act offers Linny a sense of “small potency” while she is subject to Ram’s pimping? Why doesn’t she try to hoard money instead?

4. Linny’s position at the library is a dream come true: a first opportunity for legitimate employment and access to unlimited books. Why is there no description of her momentous first day at work?

5. Linny is disgusted with the pretensions and prejudices of the British in India, frustrated by the limitations placed on her exploration of her surroundings, uninterested in the rampant matchmaking culture, and unable to find compatible women with whom to make friends. Why, then, does she insist that
“Faced with the thought of leaving India, of returning to Liverpool, I knew then that I would do whatever I had to. Marry someone. Anyone”
?

6. Why does Shaker refer to Linny as “his sign”? What is her reaction to this label?

7. Linny is perceptive enough to notice that opium has reduced Meg from an ambitious, flamboyant character to a shadow of her former self,
“worn and listless as all the other women . . . ”
. She is also aware that laudanum, Meg’s favorite antidote to all her child’s complaints, is potentially fatal. Why does she ignore her misgivings and indulge in opium at Meg’s urging? Is this a suicidal tendency, or mere stupidity?

8. After escaping prostitution, Linny is shocked when she sees her own reflection:
“I didn’t know the hollow-eyed woman in the mirror”
. Ten years later, at the peak of her opium addiction, she is again unable to recognize her reflection:
“I looked at myself in the mirror again . . . I had lost sight of the woman who called herself Linny Gow”
. At the end of the novel, Linny claims,
“I can again bear to look at my own reflection . . . I look like a mother, an ordinary woman”
. Discuss the use of mirrors and reflections elsewhere in the novel. Does Linny succeed in finding her true self, and, if so, where does she find this image reflected?

 9. Linny makes one attempt at escaping the tedium of India. As she stands at the dock with her luggage, poised to leave, a sadhu, or holy man, speaks unintelligibly to her. Linny claims,
“I understood the portent of the sadhu”
and reverses her decision. Why does she choose to interpret the event this way?

10. Linny finds herself egging on Somers’s violence:
“for some inexplicable reason I sometimes found myself goading him purposely . . . I wanted to see how far I could push him before he would react . . . I think now . . . that it was a way of drawing Somers’s attention—even if the attention was filled with nothing more than trepidation and fear of physical pain. I wanted to reach him in some way, in the confusing push and pull of our relationship”
. In what ways is Linny’s tale a timeless look at childhood and/or marital abuse and their psychological effects on a woman? What stereotypical behaviors does she fall into? What lesson does her story provide for healing and renewal?

11. Frances Gow, Linny’s “soft and dreamy” dead mother, plays a recurring role in Linny’s imagination. Frances’s voice soothes Linny through her first rape at the age of eleven. Her face appears, albeit drowned, as Linny struggles against chloral poisoning during her ordeal on Rodney Street. Where else does she appear? What traits does Linny assign to Frances, and what strengths does she imagine she gleans from her upbringing at her mother’s hands?

12. What “strange and troubling sensation of loss” does Linny experience when she leaves her life of prostitution behind?

 

Copyright © 2004 by Linda Holeman

 

Reader’s Guide copyright © 2005 by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
www.crownpublishing.com

 

Originally published in Great Britain by Headline, London, in 2004.

 

CROWN is a trademark and the Crown colophon is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Holeman, Linda, 1949–
The linnet bird : a novel / Linda Holeman.

  1. India—History—British occupation, 1765–1947—Fiction.  2. British—
India—Fiction.  3. Women—India—Fiction.  4. Ex-prostitutes—Fiction.  
5. Married women—Fiction.  I. Title.

PR9199.3.H5485L56 2005
813'.54—dc22        2004025392

 

eISBN 0-307-23848-2

 

v1.0

 

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