This image is the cover for the book The Woman of Knockaloe, A Parable, Classics To Go

The Woman of Knockaloe, A Parable, Classics To Go

The Woman of Knockaloe: A Parable is a melodramatic novel by Hall Caine first published in 1923. Set on the Isle of Man during the First World War, a young woman finds herself drawn to one of the nearby German internees. They begin a romance in the face of the fierce hostility of the local community which eventually drives them to commit suicide. The story has been described as a "minor masterpiece".

Sir Hall Caine

Sir Hall Caine, in full Sir Thomas Henry Hall Caine, (born May 14, 1853, Runcorn, Cheshire, Eng.—died Aug. 31, 1931, Isle of Man), British writer known for his popular novels combining sentiment, moral fervour, skillfully suggested local atmosphere, and strong characterization. Caine was secretary to Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the poet, painter, and leader of the Pre-Raphaelite artists in England, from 1881 to Rossetti’s death in 1882. Caine’s first novel, The Shadow of a Crime, was published in 1885. It was followed by several others—including The Deemster (1887), The Manxman (1894), The Eternal City (1901), The Woman Thou Gavest Me (1913), and The Woman of Knockaloe (1923). Caine settled in the Isle of Man and sat from 1901 to 1908 in the House of Keys, the lower house of its legislature. He was knighted in 1918 for services as an Allied propagandist in the United States.

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