Secrets of the Steppes

$35.00
Secrets of the Steppes A dual-timeline historical novel of letters, legacy, and the quiet power of truth Set against the vast, wind-scoured plains of Tasmania�s Central Highlands, Secrets of the Steppes is a richly layered novel about women who refuse to let their lives � or their communities � be reduced to tidy numbers. In the present day, Claire Martin, a young teacher newly arrived on the remote plateau, stumbles upon a bundle of century-old letters hidden beneath the floorboards of an abandoned homestead. Written by Mary Wilson, a schoolmistress in the 1890s, the letters pull Claire into a forgotten world of isolated classrooms, winter routes walked in pairs, and a quiet but fierce resistance against colonial bureaucracy determined to close �impractical� rural schools. As Claire reads by lamplight, Mary�s voice rises from the past: vivid, observant, and resolute. Through intimate correspondence with her confidante Eliza, Mary records daily life at The Steppes � the barefoot children of shepherds, the struggle for books and slates, the tightening pressure from Hobart officials who value efficiency over human cost. When Mary is forced to leave to save her health, the letters reveal something unexpected: a community � and its children � strong enough to hold the school without her. The novel unfolds across two entwined timelines. In the present, Claire finds herself confronting the same forces Mary once faced: data without context, tidy narratives that erase lived reality, and the unspoken expectation that devotion must come at the cost of breath. As Claire helps build a living archive of letters, maps, and modern voices, she discovers that legacy is not about standing alone � it is about teaching others how to hold the rope. Blending authentic historical detail with lyrical prose, Secrets of the Steppes explores how truth survives through ink, how communities resist erasure in quiet ways, and how women across generations learn that rest is not retreat � it is resistance. Perfect for readers who love atmospheric historical fiction, epistolary storytelling, and novels like The Correspondent, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and The Light Between Oceans, this is a story of wind and endurance, of classrooms lit by winter sun, and of names that refuse to be made small. A novel about teaching, belonging, and the radical act of telling the full story � even when the world asks you to streamline it.
Secrets of the Steppes A dual-timeline historical novel of letters, legacy, and the quiet power of truth Set against the vast, wind-scoured plains of Tasmania�s Central Highlands, Secrets of the Steppes is a richly layered novel about women who refuse to let their lives � or their communities � be reduced to tidy numbers. In the present day, Claire Martin, a young teacher newly arrived on the remote plateau, stumbles upon a bundle of century-old letters hidden beneath the floorboards of an abandoned homestead. Written by Mary Wilson, a schoolmistress in the 1890s, the letters pull Claire into a forgotten world of isolated classrooms, winter routes walked in pairs, and a quiet but fierce resistance against colonial bureaucracy determined to close �impractical� rural schools. As Claire reads by lamplight, Mary�s voice rises from the past: vivid, observant, and resolute. Through intimate correspondence with her confidante Eliza, Mary records daily life at The Steppes � the barefoot children of shepherds, the struggle for books and slates, the tightening pressure from Hobart officials who value efficiency over human cost. When Mary is forced to leave to save her health, the letters reveal something unexpected: a community � and its children � strong enough to hold the school without her. The novel unfolds across two entwined timelines. In the present, Claire finds herself confronting the same forces Mary once faced: data without context, tidy narratives that erase lived reality, and the unspoken expectation that devotion must come at the cost of breath. As Claire helps build a living archive of letters, maps, and modern voices, she discovers that legacy is not about standing alone � it is about teaching others how to hold the rope. Blending authentic historical detail with lyrical prose, Secrets of the Steppes explores how truth survives through ink, how communities resist erasure in quiet ways, and how women across generations learn that rest is not retreat � it is resistance. Perfect for readers who love atmospheric historical fiction, epistolary storytelling, and novels like The Correspondent, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and The Light Between Oceans, this is a story of wind and endurance, of classrooms lit by winter sun, and of names that refuse to be made small. A novel about teaching, belonging, and the radical act of telling the full story � even when the world asks you to streamline it.