Debut Novel 'Immaculate' Unearths Family Secrets and Generational Silence in San Francisco
June 10th, 2026 7:00 AM
By: Newsworthy Staff
Elisabeth DeRichmond's debut novel 'Immaculate' explores how family secrets and inherited silence shape generations, set against the backdrop of San Francisco from the 1894 to the 1950s.

Debut novelist Elisabeth "Erzsie" DeRichmond announces the release of Immaculate, a richly layered historical novel that examines the hidden costs of silence and the ways family secrets can shape generations long after they are first buried. The novel is now available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle formats.
Beginning in Victorian era San Francisco and extending into the carefully curated world of the 1950s, Immaculate follows Emily Catherine O'Sullivan as she navigates a lifetime shaped by faith, family expectations, and truths too dangerous to speak aloud. Through one woman's journey, the novel explores how shame can become an inheritance and how silence, passed from mother to daughter, can alter the course of generations.
The story opens in 1894, in the gaslit streets of a rapidly growing San Francisco where respectability is everything and secrets are often the currency of survival. When the devastating earthquake of 1906 strikes, it does more than destroy buildings and reshape neighborhoods. It exposes fractures already running through one family, bringing long buried truths closer to the surface. As San Francisco rebuilds itself over the following decades, Emily witnesses the lasting consequences of those hidden truths. She sees daughters inherit their mothers' silence, watches shame passed down like an heirloom, and comes to understand how certain lies can become so deeply woven into family identity that they begin to feel like truth.
At the heart of Immaculate is a question that resonates far beyond its historical setting: What happens when the stories we refuse to tell become part of the legacy we leave behind? "Immaculate began with my fascination with the women who lived through the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake," says DeRichmond. "The novel asks how trauma, shame, and silence travel through families and what it takes for someone to finally break that cycle."
A compelling blend of historical fiction and family saga, Immaculate examines the pressure to maintain appearances in a society that often values perfection over honesty. Through Emily Catherine's experiences, the novel explores the difficult choices women have faced across generations and the personal cost of preserving family secrets. The earthquake serves as both a historical event and a powerful metaphor throughout the novel. Just as San Francisco repeatedly rebuilds itself throughout the twentieth century, Emily must confront whether healing is possible without first acknowledging the truths that have remained hidden for so long.
With themes of identity, resilience, forgiveness, and generational trauma, Immaculate offers readers an intimate portrait of one woman's reckoning with the silences that shaped her life. It is a story about memory, family, and the courage required to challenge inherited patterns before they are passed on yet again.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by 24-7 Press Release. You can read the source press release here,
