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Malcolm Ross

    This author writes under several different names, allowing their works to explore diverse literary landscapes and styles. Their ability to adopt different monikers reflects the depth of their creative scope and flexibility across various genres and narrative approaches. Readers can discover a wide spectrum of their output, with each name hinting at a distinct facet of their literary artistry. This author's approach invites exploration of their complete body of work across the different identities they assume.

    On a Far Wild Shore
    • On a Far Wild Shore

      • 512 pages
      • 18 hours of reading

      In the summer of 1889, Elizabeth Troy, a young widow, steps off a train at a remote station in Cornwall. She is looking for Pallas House, the ancestral home of her late husband. The circumstances that have brought her to this lost and peaceful valley in the corner of England are bizarre enough, but they pale beside those she is about to face.She plans to stay a month or so and then return to her calling as a nurse. But she is stunned to learn that her husband, Bill, who died on their wedding day, has left her the entire Pallas Estate -- three and a half thousand acres -- in addition to three tin mines and a house filled with treasures.Immediately, she is branded the "furriner," the interloper, the usurper, and must endure the bitter -- albeit understandable -- wrath of Bill's older sister, Morwenna, who raised him and for the last thirty years has singlehandedly managed the estate -- so badly that it is near ruin when Elizabeth takes over.Elizabeth's days are soon filled with the onerous task of reviving the farms and mines, but the void left by Bill's death remains. Who will fill it? Here, too, the history of the Troy family overshadows her choices.

      On a Far Wild Shore