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An ounce of courage. A split-second leap of faith. Together, they propel two young women to chase a new life--one that's reimagined from what they might have become. In turn-of-the-century America, a young girl dreams of a world that stretches beyond the confines of a quiet life on the family farm. With little more than her wit and a cigar box of treasures to call her own, Mable steps away from all she knows, seeking the limitless marvels of the Chicago World's Fair. There, a chance encounter triggers her destiny--a life with a famed showman by the name of John Ringling. A quarter of a century later, Lady Rosamund Easling of Yorkshire, England, boards a ship to America as a last adventure before her life is planned out for her. There, the twenties are roaring, and the rich and famous gather at opulent, Gatsby-esque parties in the grandest ballrooms the country has to offer. The Jazz Age has arrived, and with it, the golden era of the American circus, whose queen is none other than the enigmatic Mable Ringling. When Rosamund's path crosses with Mable's and the Ringlings' glittering world, she makes the life-altering decision to leave behind a comfortable future of estates and propriety, instead choosing the nomadic life of a trick rider in the Ringling Brothers' circus. A novel that is at once captivating, deeply poignant, and swirling with exquisite historical details of a bygone world, The Ringmaster's Wife will escort readers into the center ring, with its bright lights, exotic animals, and a dazzling performance that can only be described as the greatest show on earth!"--
"What is revealed when you pull back the curtain of the greatest show on earth?"--
Reviews with the most likes.
Loved this book. Have an interest in the Ringlings and their connection to Sarasota, and of course the circus, so felt like I was along for the ride. It's a fictional account of John and Mabel's wonderful life as well as that of the circus and it's people, particularly Lady Rosamund who joins the circus at the behest of Colin Keary, who was a right hand man of Ringling's and tasked with running the circus. He found Rosamund and her Arabian horse performing in England. The book and the lives of the two couples evolve, with a focus on the late 1920's. I listened to this book and Enjoyed it from the first page to the last. It's a feel good book.
3.75Greats:Historical research: I loved the facts and fictionalization of John and Mable Ringling's romance. It was precious to get a sense of how deeply he loved her and how she wise she was in undergirding his efforts. (The references in the back were interesting; evidently her influence had been a stabilizing influence on his spending/earning habits also.)Circus details: I've actually read a few period books about the circus, detailing many facts that felt familiar when reading this story. It was great to be able to read through this story and have the details spring off the page just as vividly as those other authors who actually got to see the true circus in the period when it was touring.Period literature: Oh, it steals my heart when an author makes the effort to actually find out what books were popular when the characters lived. Not every classic was a bestseller at first, and not every bestseller became a classic. Adding in [b:The Heir Of Redclyffe 1383791 The Heir Of Redclyffe Charlotte M. Yonge https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1183148456s/1383791.jpg 1373815] and other lesser known books delights every corner of my book-loving heart.Characters: Loved John and Mable...but also loved Rose and Colin! Especially the scene in the ring when he starts playing the violin!Not so greats:The timeline: I still love “Butterfly and the Violin” best out of the dual-timeline novels I've read. At times this was choppy, and I felt cheated of a few scenes that had to suffer. It felt more like vignettes in places, rather than getting to fall right into a story and live in it for several hundred pages. This did improve after the halfway point.Historical oops: Often I find many of these, yet here there was just one—but this one kind of jumped out at me; when Colin fishes Rose out of the water when they meet, there's a mention that she was a woman driving a car alone as though that was odd or before its time. It would have been better phrased to make it clear that her impediment to driving was actually her parents' standards or disapproval; I have an entire shelf full of old books from the decade before WW1 where women were quite at home behind the wheels of early cars and only enlisted chauffeurs if they did not wish to drive or had plenty of money. I wouldn't have noticed it, I dare say, if I weren't well read in the genre of early cars...Overall, an enjoyable book, though personally I still am partial to [b:The Rose in the Ring 17795934 The Rose in the Ring George Barr McCutcheon https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png 6321543] and [b:A Peep Behind the Scenes 6091317 A Peep Behind the Scenes Amy Catherine Walton https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1234475740s/6091317.jpg 1618811] as my first two circus-tale loves. (These are both very old books.)For lovers of: dual timelines, jazz age, circus, fictionalized historical-figure tales, horses, and romance.