Books by Jennifer Cody Epstein

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Wunderland

Wunderland is the history, thriller, fiction, suspense and literature novel which plot the story of a young girl who has different questions to ask from her parents. Jennifer Cody Epstein is the author of this fantastic novel. She is the bestselling author in the New York Times and acclaims her success internationally. Jennifer is currently living in Brooklyn with her two sisters and beloved husband. In this novel, Ava Fisher is a young girl who grew up on her own after migration from Germany. She was just ten-years-old when she came with the refugees in America with other refugees. Ava is a smart and beautiful girl who wanted to become a writer. She has different questions to ask from her parents but there is no one to answer her questions. Ava’s mother name is Ilse who dropped her in the refugee’s camp a few decades ago. She has not seen her father in her life and does not about anything about him. Ava is desperate to find out the reality of her parents and family. She wanted to know why her mother left her in the orphanage house and never came back. One day, an old friend of her mother from Germany came to meet her. She is there to answer all of her questions regarding her mother Ilse. Renate has the number of letters from her mother which she has written to her daughter but none of them will reach to her. The more she read letters the more she knows about her mother and father. Why Renate did not give her those letters before and where they are now?

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The Madwomen of Paris

“The Madwomen of Paris by Jennifer Cody Epstein ” is a good book that you can read online or download to read it later. Before starting the reading or downloading, here is the summary of the book that you can read. You may also like Blood & Bonds by Scarlett Grey PDF Download When Josephine arrives at the Salpêtrière asylum, she is covered in blood, badly bruised, and suffering from amnesia. She is quickly diagnosed with what the Paris papers are calling “the epidemic of the age”: hysteria, a disease is so baffling and widespread that Doctor Jean-Martin Charcot, the asylum’s famous director, devotes many of his popular public lectures to the malady. Charcot often uses hypnosis to prompt his patients to reproduce their hysterical symptoms, and to his delight, Josephine proves extraordinarily susceptible to this unconscious manipulation. He is soon featuring the young woman on his stage, entrancing her into fantastical acts and hallucinatory fits before enraptured audiences and eager newsmen—many of whom feature her on their papers’ front pages.