The Stargazer's Sister

A Novel

Look inside
Caroline, known as “Lina” to her family, has always lived in the shadow of her older brother William Herschel’s accomplishments. And yet when William invites Lina to join him in England to assist in his musical and astronomical pursuits—not to mention to run his bachelor household—she accepts, finding a new sense of purpose. William may be an obsessive genius, but Lina adores him, and aids him with the same fervency as a beloved wife.
 
When William decides to marry, however, Lina’s world collapses. As she attempts to rebuild a future, we witness the dawning of an early feminist consciousness—a woman struggling to find her own place among the stars.

“A gorgeous period novel that champions female empowerment…. Reveals a passionate woman’s place in history.” —Paste
 
“Brown’s writing is as luminous as the skies her characters contemplate.” —Caroline Leavitt, Boston Globe
 
“Intriguing.... A love story … but unusual in being about a brother and sister, and what they accomplished together.” —Andrea Barrett, The Washington Post

“A lovely addition to Carrie Brown’s works of historical fiction. Brown brings the true story of the Herschel siblings to life in exquisite detail and deftly explores what it meant for Caroline to be an intelligent woman far ahead of her time.” —BookPage

 “Quoting the Royal Astronomical Society’s motto, Lina tells a youngster, ‘Let whatever shines be noted.’ With her novel, Brown does just that.” —MinneapolisStar Tribune
 
“A haunting evocation—actual and imagined—of the life of Caroline ‘Lina’ Herschel, the younger sister of the eighteenth-century astronomer William Herschel. The tale is deeply satisfying, a testament to Carrie Brown’s seductive voice and her ability to translate Lina’s deep emotional life in all its complexity, both joyful and heartbreaking. I love this book, a wonderful adventure and a resonating example of the difficulties faced by so many women for so very long.” —Robb Forman Dew, National Book Award–winning author of Dale Loves Sophie to Death
 
“With a calm, polished style that suits its protagonist, the novel brings to life both sister and stargazer . . . shining like a pair of binary stars in orbit together.” 
Kansas City Star
 
“A spellbinding account of two lives intertwined and bolstered by awe.” —Shelf Awareness 
 
“Wonderfully written with keen insight into the obsessive, almost marital relationship between Lina and William, The Stargazer’s Sister offers us a glimpse of the limited world offered to women of intelligence in earlier times.” —Historical Novels Review 
 
“Rich and multi-layered, this love story of a sister and her brother is always a pleasure to read, providing us with a fascinating glimpse into a life that changed our understanding of the cosmos and our place within it. Brown excels in showing us how Lina Hershel left her indelible mark on science, one that is greatly enhanced with startling promise, more than anyone could have possibly imagined considering the time period in which she lived.” —Curled Up With a Good Book 
 
“The reader is privy to Caroline’s childhood of abuse and illness, her loneliness in spite of her closeness to her brother, and her unrelenting labor (working day and night) in service of his work as an astronomer. As with Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, the beautiful rests alongside the sad providing a complex, interesting portrait of a life.”  —Ploughshares 
© Aaron Mahler

CARRIE BROWN is the author of five novels and a collection of short stories. She has received many honors for her work, including a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, the Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Award, the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize, the Great Lakes Book Award, and the Annual Library of Virginia Literary Award (twice). Her short fiction and essays have appeared in many literary journals. She and her husband, the novelist John Gregory Brown, live in Massachusetts, where they teach at Deerfield Academy.

View titles by Carrie Brown
The wind is with them, and she watches from the ship’s rail as the hard places disappear, fortress and stony beach and the long humped quay at Hellevoetsluis, the church and bell tower reduced in minutes to dark notches on the horizon. It is Saturday, and the church bells were ringing as they came aboard—not the hour, thus either a wedding or a funeral, she thought—but she cannot hear them anymore. It happened quickly, William taking her hand and helping her into the little vessel which took them out to the packet boat some distance away at anchor. She looks back from the ship’s deck now and realizes that for the first time in her life she is not standing on solid ground.
 
The afternoon is cool for August, shadows of clouds drifting over the land behind them, but as the ship moves farther from shore, a slant of sunlight falls from sky to ground, illuminating the row of painted houses facing the water. Glass in the windows flashes, pricks of light glinting along the vanishing quay in the dark afternoon.
 
She holds tight to the rail. She has dreamed about this departure, longed for it. Now she cannot look away from the glowing scene shrinking on the horizon, retreating from sight as if being tugged backward toward a void.
 
At last all definition is lost, beach and quay and houses and church and bell tower gone entirely. She no longer can make out the inlets leading into the marshes or the mouth of the river. An egret lifts from somewhere and can be seen for a moment, bright scrap against the tumult of dark clouds. She tries to keep the bird in sight, but finally it, too, disappears. Then there is only a thin black line on the horizon, barely visible, to suggest what they have left behind. When the line vanishes completely, she feels her stomach constrict. She has to remind herself: it is not that the land has slipped off the edge of the planet and into the void, though that is definitely the impression.
Her mind knows the land is still there, but what she feels is its absence.
 
Bright shifting patterns wrinkle the sea’s surface. Far out, floating patches of darkness, giant cloud shadows, roam over the water.
 
She turns to find her brother, but William has been absorbed among the passengers gathered at the rail.
 
Spray from a wave lands on her face and hands, startling with its cold, and Lina laughs even as she wipes her eyes. A woman beside her turns and gives her a questioning look.
 
***
On the post wagon yesterday, the final day of their voyage toward the coast of Holland from the forested slopes surrounding Hanover, her black hat had blown off. The land had been flat and flooded in places with shallow water that reflected the sky, and she’d looked back to see her useless hat floating on a mirrored patch of cloud-strewn blue. A further weight had seemed to leave her.
 
William had closed his book and glanced behind them at the shimmering field. “Your hat,” he’d said. “Shall I ask them to stop?”
 
“Oh! No,” she’d said, trying not to smile.
With every kilometer between herself and the home she had left behind, she’d felt lighter, as if soon she would float up off her seat.
 
William had shaken his head, puzzled, a brother amused by his sister’s inexplicable amusement.
 
She had not told him this: sometimes during the years he had been away from home, she’d walked down to the river at the bot­tom of the orchard. She’d known that if she waded in, perhaps even only as far as her knees, her dress would have become too heavy for her to struggle back up the bank to safety. The current could be powerful, especially with snowmelt in early spring. Ill­ness had weakened her, and she was not strong. She had never learned to swim, as her brothers had. A girl was not taught any­thing she could use to save herself in the larger world. She had frightened herself, staring at that river.
 
Finally she’d written to William in England. Two words: Save me.
 
In a postscript, to maintain her dignity, she’d added: There is no one here with whom to converse anymore except the horse, and he has few opinions and a poor vocabulary with which to express them.
 
It had been necessary to make it possible for William to understand her plea as lighthearted. She could not have borne it if he had refused a request made in earnest. Yet he had known. He had understood her. He would not disappoint her. He was sorry it had taken so long, he wrote by reply. He had been making plans. He had not forgotten her.
 
***
Now, less than a year later, here they are, six days away from Hanover, six days away from her abandoned life. England’s invisible shore beckons.
 
She will never return, she thinks. Nothing could ever make her return.
 
Waves close over the overlapping road of their wake.
 
William appears beside her, touches her shoulder. She turns.
 
They are sailing out from beneath the clouds, and the packet moves as if passing into another realm out of the shadows and into bright sunlight. She can actually watch the sharp edge of the clouds’ darkness sliding along the deck from bow to stern, until at last they are free of it entirely.
 
The heat of the sun falls against her skin.
 
Again she has to wipe her cheeks. Well, these are tears, after all, and just as salty as the ocean. She knew they were there behind the laughter, tears for how awful it has been, all these years.
 
Her old life—and the life she always imagined would lie before her—is gone.
 
She turns away from what they have left behind.
 
She is twenty-two years old. Her brother William has set her free.
“A gorgeous period novel that champions female empowerment…. Reveals a passionate woman’s place in history.” —Paste
 
“Brown’s writing is as luminous as the skies her characters contemplate.” —Caroline Leavitt, Boston Globe
 
“Intriguing.... A love story … but unusual in being about a brother and sister, and what they accomplished together.” —Andrea Barrett, The Washington Post

“A lovely addition to Carrie Brown’s works of historical fiction. Brown brings the true story of the Herschel siblings to life in exquisite detail and deftly explores what it meant for Caroline to be an intelligent woman far ahead of her time.” —BookPage

 “Quoting the Royal Astronomical Society’s motto, Lina tells a youngster, ‘Let whatever shines be noted.’ With her novel, Brown does just that.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
“A haunting evocation—actual and imagined—of the life of Caroline ‘Lina’ Herschel, the younger sister of the eighteenth-century astronomer William Herschel. The tale is deeply satisfying, a testament to Carrie Brown’s seductive voice and her ability to translate Lina’s deep emotional life in all its complexity, both joyful and heartbreaking. I love this book, a wonderful adventure and a resonating example of the difficulties faced by so many women for so very long.” —Robb Forman Dew, National Book Award–winning author of Dale Loves Sophie to Death
 
“With a calm, polished style that suits its protagonist, the novel brings to life both sister and stargazer . . . shining like a pair of binary stars in orbit together.”
Kansas City Star
 
“A spellbinding account of two lives intertwined and bolstered by awe.” —Shelf Awareness 
 
“Wonderfully written with keen insight into the obsessive, almost marital relationship between Lina and William, The Stargazer’s Sister offers us a glimpse of the limited world offered to women of intelligence in earlier times.” —Historical Novels Review 
 
“Rich and multi-layered, this love story of a sister and her brother is always a pleasure to read, providing us with a fascinating glimpse into a life that changed our understanding of the cosmos and our place within it. Brown excels in showing us how Lina Hershel left her indelible mark on science, one that is greatly enhanced with startling promise, more than anyone could have possibly imagined considering the time period in which she lived.” —Curled Up With a Good Book 
 
“The reader is privy to Caroline’s childhood of abuse and illness, her loneliness in spite of her closeness to her brother, and her unrelenting labor (working day and night) in service of his work as an astronomer. As with Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, the beautiful rests alongside the sad providing a complex, interesting portrait of a life.”  —Ploughshares 

 

About

Caroline, known as “Lina” to her family, has always lived in the shadow of her older brother William Herschel’s accomplishments. And yet when William invites Lina to join him in England to assist in his musical and astronomical pursuits—not to mention to run his bachelor household—she accepts, finding a new sense of purpose. William may be an obsessive genius, but Lina adores him, and aids him with the same fervency as a beloved wife.
 
When William decides to marry, however, Lina’s world collapses. As she attempts to rebuild a future, we witness the dawning of an early feminist consciousness—a woman struggling to find her own place among the stars.

“A gorgeous period novel that champions female empowerment…. Reveals a passionate woman’s place in history.” —Paste
 
“Brown’s writing is as luminous as the skies her characters contemplate.” —Caroline Leavitt, Boston Globe
 
“Intriguing.... A love story … but unusual in being about a brother and sister, and what they accomplished together.” —Andrea Barrett, The Washington Post

“A lovely addition to Carrie Brown’s works of historical fiction. Brown brings the true story of the Herschel siblings to life in exquisite detail and deftly explores what it meant for Caroline to be an intelligent woman far ahead of her time.” —BookPage

 “Quoting the Royal Astronomical Society’s motto, Lina tells a youngster, ‘Let whatever shines be noted.’ With her novel, Brown does just that.” —MinneapolisStar Tribune
 
“A haunting evocation—actual and imagined—of the life of Caroline ‘Lina’ Herschel, the younger sister of the eighteenth-century astronomer William Herschel. The tale is deeply satisfying, a testament to Carrie Brown’s seductive voice and her ability to translate Lina’s deep emotional life in all its complexity, both joyful and heartbreaking. I love this book, a wonderful adventure and a resonating example of the difficulties faced by so many women for so very long.” —Robb Forman Dew, National Book Award–winning author of Dale Loves Sophie to Death
 
“With a calm, polished style that suits its protagonist, the novel brings to life both sister and stargazer . . . shining like a pair of binary stars in orbit together.” 
Kansas City Star
 
“A spellbinding account of two lives intertwined and bolstered by awe.” —Shelf Awareness 
 
“Wonderfully written with keen insight into the obsessive, almost marital relationship between Lina and William, The Stargazer’s Sister offers us a glimpse of the limited world offered to women of intelligence in earlier times.” —Historical Novels Review 
 
“Rich and multi-layered, this love story of a sister and her brother is always a pleasure to read, providing us with a fascinating glimpse into a life that changed our understanding of the cosmos and our place within it. Brown excels in showing us how Lina Hershel left her indelible mark on science, one that is greatly enhanced with startling promise, more than anyone could have possibly imagined considering the time period in which she lived.” —Curled Up With a Good Book 
 
“The reader is privy to Caroline’s childhood of abuse and illness, her loneliness in spite of her closeness to her brother, and her unrelenting labor (working day and night) in service of his work as an astronomer. As with Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, the beautiful rests alongside the sad providing a complex, interesting portrait of a life.”  —Ploughshares 

Author

© Aaron Mahler

CARRIE BROWN is the author of five novels and a collection of short stories. She has received many honors for her work, including a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, the Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Award, the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize, the Great Lakes Book Award, and the Annual Library of Virginia Literary Award (twice). Her short fiction and essays have appeared in many literary journals. She and her husband, the novelist John Gregory Brown, live in Massachusetts, where they teach at Deerfield Academy.

View titles by Carrie Brown

Excerpt

The wind is with them, and she watches from the ship’s rail as the hard places disappear, fortress and stony beach and the long humped quay at Hellevoetsluis, the church and bell tower reduced in minutes to dark notches on the horizon. It is Saturday, and the church bells were ringing as they came aboard—not the hour, thus either a wedding or a funeral, she thought—but she cannot hear them anymore. It happened quickly, William taking her hand and helping her into the little vessel which took them out to the packet boat some distance away at anchor. She looks back from the ship’s deck now and realizes that for the first time in her life she is not standing on solid ground.
 
The afternoon is cool for August, shadows of clouds drifting over the land behind them, but as the ship moves farther from shore, a slant of sunlight falls from sky to ground, illuminating the row of painted houses facing the water. Glass in the windows flashes, pricks of light glinting along the vanishing quay in the dark afternoon.
 
She holds tight to the rail. She has dreamed about this departure, longed for it. Now she cannot look away from the glowing scene shrinking on the horizon, retreating from sight as if being tugged backward toward a void.
 
At last all definition is lost, beach and quay and houses and church and bell tower gone entirely. She no longer can make out the inlets leading into the marshes or the mouth of the river. An egret lifts from somewhere and can be seen for a moment, bright scrap against the tumult of dark clouds. She tries to keep the bird in sight, but finally it, too, disappears. Then there is only a thin black line on the horizon, barely visible, to suggest what they have left behind. When the line vanishes completely, she feels her stomach constrict. She has to remind herself: it is not that the land has slipped off the edge of the planet and into the void, though that is definitely the impression.
Her mind knows the land is still there, but what she feels is its absence.
 
Bright shifting patterns wrinkle the sea’s surface. Far out, floating patches of darkness, giant cloud shadows, roam over the water.
 
She turns to find her brother, but William has been absorbed among the passengers gathered at the rail.
 
Spray from a wave lands on her face and hands, startling with its cold, and Lina laughs even as she wipes her eyes. A woman beside her turns and gives her a questioning look.
 
***
On the post wagon yesterday, the final day of their voyage toward the coast of Holland from the forested slopes surrounding Hanover, her black hat had blown off. The land had been flat and flooded in places with shallow water that reflected the sky, and she’d looked back to see her useless hat floating on a mirrored patch of cloud-strewn blue. A further weight had seemed to leave her.
 
William had closed his book and glanced behind them at the shimmering field. “Your hat,” he’d said. “Shall I ask them to stop?”
 
“Oh! No,” she’d said, trying not to smile.
With every kilometer between herself and the home she had left behind, she’d felt lighter, as if soon she would float up off her seat.
 
William had shaken his head, puzzled, a brother amused by his sister’s inexplicable amusement.
 
She had not told him this: sometimes during the years he had been away from home, she’d walked down to the river at the bot­tom of the orchard. She’d known that if she waded in, perhaps even only as far as her knees, her dress would have become too heavy for her to struggle back up the bank to safety. The current could be powerful, especially with snowmelt in early spring. Ill­ness had weakened her, and she was not strong. She had never learned to swim, as her brothers had. A girl was not taught any­thing she could use to save herself in the larger world. She had frightened herself, staring at that river.
 
Finally she’d written to William in England. Two words: Save me.
 
In a postscript, to maintain her dignity, she’d added: There is no one here with whom to converse anymore except the horse, and he has few opinions and a poor vocabulary with which to express them.
 
It had been necessary to make it possible for William to understand her plea as lighthearted. She could not have borne it if he had refused a request made in earnest. Yet he had known. He had understood her. He would not disappoint her. He was sorry it had taken so long, he wrote by reply. He had been making plans. He had not forgotten her.
 
***
Now, less than a year later, here they are, six days away from Hanover, six days away from her abandoned life. England’s invisible shore beckons.
 
She will never return, she thinks. Nothing could ever make her return.
 
Waves close over the overlapping road of their wake.
 
William appears beside her, touches her shoulder. She turns.
 
They are sailing out from beneath the clouds, and the packet moves as if passing into another realm out of the shadows and into bright sunlight. She can actually watch the sharp edge of the clouds’ darkness sliding along the deck from bow to stern, until at last they are free of it entirely.
 
The heat of the sun falls against her skin.
 
Again she has to wipe her cheeks. Well, these are tears, after all, and just as salty as the ocean. She knew they were there behind the laughter, tears for how awful it has been, all these years.
 
Her old life—and the life she always imagined would lie before her—is gone.
 
She turns away from what they have left behind.
 
She is twenty-two years old. Her brother William has set her free.

Praise

“A gorgeous period novel that champions female empowerment…. Reveals a passionate woman’s place in history.” —Paste
 
“Brown’s writing is as luminous as the skies her characters contemplate.” —Caroline Leavitt, Boston Globe
 
“Intriguing.... A love story … but unusual in being about a brother and sister, and what they accomplished together.” —Andrea Barrett, The Washington Post

“A lovely addition to Carrie Brown’s works of historical fiction. Brown brings the true story of the Herschel siblings to life in exquisite detail and deftly explores what it meant for Caroline to be an intelligent woman far ahead of her time.” —BookPage

 “Quoting the Royal Astronomical Society’s motto, Lina tells a youngster, ‘Let whatever shines be noted.’ With her novel, Brown does just that.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
“A haunting evocation—actual and imagined—of the life of Caroline ‘Lina’ Herschel, the younger sister of the eighteenth-century astronomer William Herschel. The tale is deeply satisfying, a testament to Carrie Brown’s seductive voice and her ability to translate Lina’s deep emotional life in all its complexity, both joyful and heartbreaking. I love this book, a wonderful adventure and a resonating example of the difficulties faced by so many women for so very long.” —Robb Forman Dew, National Book Award–winning author of Dale Loves Sophie to Death
 
“With a calm, polished style that suits its protagonist, the novel brings to life both sister and stargazer . . . shining like a pair of binary stars in orbit together.”
Kansas City Star
 
“A spellbinding account of two lives intertwined and bolstered by awe.” —Shelf Awareness 
 
“Wonderfully written with keen insight into the obsessive, almost marital relationship between Lina and William, The Stargazer’s Sister offers us a glimpse of the limited world offered to women of intelligence in earlier times.” —Historical Novels Review 
 
“Rich and multi-layered, this love story of a sister and her brother is always a pleasure to read, providing us with a fascinating glimpse into a life that changed our understanding of the cosmos and our place within it. Brown excels in showing us how Lina Hershel left her indelible mark on science, one that is greatly enhanced with startling promise, more than anyone could have possibly imagined considering the time period in which she lived.” —Curled Up With a Good Book 
 
“The reader is privy to Caroline’s childhood of abuse and illness, her loneliness in spite of her closeness to her brother, and her unrelenting labor (working day and night) in service of his work as an astronomer. As with Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, the beautiful rests alongside the sad providing a complex, interesting portrait of a life.”  —Ploughshares 

 

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