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The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames

A Memoir

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

A riveting family drama evocative of Angela's Ashes and The Glass Castle, about a woman who discovers the shocking secret at the center of her mother's life.

Justine had always been told that her mother came from royal blood. The proof could be found in her mother's elegance, her uppercrust London accent—and in a cryptic letter hinting at her claim to a country estate. But beneath the polished veneer lay a fearsome, unpredictable temper that drove Justine from home the moment she was old enough to escape. Years later, when her mother sent her an envelope filled with secrets from the past, Justine buried it in the back of an old filing cabinet.

Overcome with grief after her mother's death, Justine found herself drawn back to that envelope. Its contents revealed a mystery that stretched back to the early years of World War II and beyond, into the dark corridors of the Hospital for the Maintenance and Education of Exposed and Deserted Young Children. Established in the eighteenth century to raise "bastard" children to clean chamber pots for England's ruling class, the institution was tied to some of history's most influential figures and events. From its role in the development of solitary confinement and human medical experimentation to the creation of the British Museum and the Royal Academy of Arts, its impact on Western culture continues to reverberate. It was also the environment that shaped a young girl known as Dorothy Soames, who bravely withstood years of physical and emotional abuse at the hands of a sadistic headmistress—a resilient child who dreamed of escape as German bombers rained death from the skies.

Heartbreaking, surprising, and unforgettable, The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames is the true story of one woman's quest to understand the secrets that had poisoned her mother's mind, and her startling discovery that her family's fate had been sealed centuries before.

Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 9, 2020
      Attorney Cowan debuts with an impressive memoir about the unearthing of her deceased mother’s secret past and a generations-long cycle of family trauma. After her mother’s death, Cowan set out to discover what caused her emotional instability, cruelty, and “blind idolatry of status and wealth.” She learned that her mother’s mother left her at the hospital not long after birth, then reclaimed her at the age of 12. In between, Cowan’s mother lived at Foundling Hospital, a London orphanage where she was raised under the name “Dorothy Soames” in grim conditions, working long hours doing menial and often degrading tasks. “For two centuries,” Cowan writes, “thousands of children like Dorothy Soames were raised to mend socks and clean chamber pots, to work in factories or be sent to sea.” Cowan’s mother never discussed her upbringing, and Cowan writes of how learning the details of her time in the orphanage helped her reach a posthumous reconciliation never achieved during her mother’s life. This frank account of a real-life Dickensian dystopia captivates at every turn.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2020

      Cowan's mother possessed an elegant bearing, a mysterious past--and a volatile personality that left Cowan with psychological scars and eventually led her to cut off contact, including ignoring a handwritten manuscript her mother sent her years later. Only after her mother's death did she examine the document and learn the truth: far from being a secret aristocrat, Cowan's mother had been surrendered by an unmarried farm woman to London's Foundling Hospital, an institution established to raise "deserted" illegitimate children and prepare them for lives in service or industry. In this debut, the author tells of her experiences traveling to London to view her mother's records and explore family history. Given the name Dorothy Soames, her mother was raised in an environment of physical and emotional abuse where educational and practical needs were frequently neglected. Drawing on her mother's manuscript and her own personal research, Cowan unpicks the threads of the hospital's history and how decisions made by its founders and governors decades and centuries earlier irrevocably shaped her mother's life and her relationship with Cowan. VERDICT There are no easy resolutions in Cowan's story, but this title should appeal to readers interested in family histories and complex mother-daughter relationships.--Kathleen McCallister, William & Mary Libs., Williamsburg, VA

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2020
      An attorney and environmentalist probes her troubled mother's past as the child inmate of the centuries-old Foundling Hospital of London. Cowan's English-born mother lived in "blind idolatry of wealth and status" and claimed to be descended from a line of Welsh nobles. But behind the facade and her hypercritical ways lurked a secret that the author began to uncover only after her mother's death from Alzheimer's. Haunted by their unrelentingly difficult relationship, Cowan began piecing together her story by investigating a carefully prepared memoir her mother had sent to "acknowledge her role" in their painfully adversarial relationship. The manuscript offered details of the years she had spent growing up at the Foundling Hospital, later renamed Coram after its 18th-century founder, Thomas Coram. The author's mother--renamed Dorothy Soames--had suffered multiple traumas in her life as a foundling. From the foster mother who instilled a fear of Coram from an early age to the cruel nurses who routinely humiliated her and thought nothing of using physical violence as a disciplinary tool, Dorothy's caretakers showed her little love. Her later education prepared her only for "a life of service" and offered no latitude for "independent thought." The only refuge in her otherwise dreary and isolated existence was friendship with a fellow foundling. After reading the memoir and visiting the hospital, Cowan realized the terrible impact of her mother's past, partially to blame for her raising her daughter according to a "warped, dystopian version of what she imagined a proper British upbringing to be." The author's historical analysis of the misogyny and classism that underlay the institution's outwardly humanitarian mission makes this memoir especially compelling. Well-researched and highly personal, the book presents a fascinating narrative tapestry that both informs and moves. A candidly illuminating debut memoir.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2020
      Cowan grew up at odds and angry with her mother. Not until she was in her forties and had lost both parents was Justine able to read her mother's own written memories of growing up in England. Her mother had always claimed a family connection to royalty but in writing she revealed the truth, that after her birth in 1932 she was raised at London's Foundling Hospital. In researching this institution, from its origin to its closure, Cowan discovered the harsh conditions her mother and countless other children endured. This is not only a daughter's memoir about the realities of her mother's life, but also a work of history about an inhumane system and a reminder to always consider the pain others may be hiding. Readers will find it hard not to flinch over the fraught lives of Dorothy and her family, but this thoughtful account creates a context for compassion. Book groups will find as much to discuss here as they have with The Glass Castle (2005), by Jeannette Walls, and Educated (2018), by Tara Westover.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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