![]() ![]() It was also adapted into a screenplay titled Greener Pastures in 2008. In 1998, Patience and Sarah was adapted into an opera. It was written in the late 1960s and is one of the earliest lesbian-themed books to have a happy ending. Patience and Sarah is an influential novel when it comes to Queer Romance. This will eventually lead into the two running off together. Sarah later admits that she's attracted to Patience, and Patience admits the same. Patience doesn't believe that's possible but decides to fancy Sarah's imagination. Sarah tells Patience that one day she wants to move away and have her own farm. One day, Patience has a conversation with the infamous Sarah Dowling, a local woman who is considered scandalous for her masculine fashion and behavior. Patience is a painter who enjoys painting Biblical scenes. Patience is a well-to-do young woman who lives with her brother, his wife, and their children after her father's death. They fall in love, leave their homes together to buy a farm, and live in a "Boston marriage". Patience and Sarah tells the story of two Connecticut women in 1816 named Patience White and Sarah Dowling. It was originally self-published under the title A Place For Us, but after finding a publisher it was renamed Patience and Sarah in 1971. Patience and Sarah (also written as Patience & Sarah) is a 1969 novel by Alma Routsong, published under the pen name Isabel Miller. ![]()
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