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In the Wild West of the late 1800s, a pretty, pragmatic
twenty-year-old named Polly is making ends meet as a lady of the
night at Belle's Place, a brothel in Pendleton, Oregon. In a
labyrinth of tunnels underneath the house, Ben, a Chinese
immigrant, toils in his uncle's laundry and accepts his lot as an
unwelcome stranger in America who dares not appear above ground
after dark. Against all social codes of the day, these two outcasts
begin a fragile love affair. The Third Step, an enthralling work of
historical fiction by Sharon Hart Strickland, breathes new life
into Oregon's Pendleton Underground of the late 1800s in a story of
forbidden love between two social outcasts, and the colorful
characters who inhabit their world. Based on historical fact and
characters, The Third Step begins when Polly arrives at Belle's
Place, a brothel in Pendleton, Oregon, to work in the only
profession she knows. When she accidentally runs afoul of a
prominent client, she becomes caught up in a series of events that
change her life forever. Belle's bouncer, a stoic Native American
name Quinton, is implicated in the events and must flee for his
life, while Belle tries to cover everyone's tracks. When Polly is
secretly nursed back to health in the laundry by Ben, the feelings
that develop between the two of them fly in the face of the local
society's rigid rules. A work of high drama leavened with gentle
humor, The Third Step spins a tale of the Old West that is rarely
chronicled in history books, but factually based and full of the
courageous characters that were drawn to life in the West. There's
the beautiful madame Belle; Ben's wise uncle, Lu Chung, who runs
the laundry; Father Perigan, a de-frocked priest who holds services
in the brothel's unlikely chapel; as well as hypocritical
townsfolk, a prominent and arrogant judge, the Native American
bouncer, and a mysterious state senator, among others. As Polly
regains her strength, Ben has a reason to step beyond the
subterranean world where he has been forced to live. Lovers of
history will get a rare glimpse of the rough-edged and often
discriminatory landscape of the American West, as Ben and Polly
navigate a hostile climate in Pendleton and beyond. This powerful,
poignant work delivers a fascinating tale that is rich in
historical detail, colorful characters and good, old-fashioned
romance. Anyone looking for a page-turning, wildly imaginative
American tale will relish this trip out West where the conditions
are harsh, but love, honor, and redemption can still prevail.
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Leo
Deon Meyer
Paperback
(3)
R365
R180
Discovery Miles 1 800
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