The Choral Society
By (Author) Prue Leith
Quercus Publishing
Quercus Publishing
1st January 2010
5th November 2009
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
320
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 28mm
300g
Three single women in their fifties meet when they join a choir. Lucy, recently widowed, is a cook and food journalist; Joanna, a successful business woman, never married; Rebecca is a divorced interior decorator. Each of the women is at a crossroads and they quickly form a bond.
The trio decide to combine their talents to restore a crumbling pile in Cornwall and turn it into a cookery school and spa. The project brings its own conflicts, both professional and personal. The novel's themes touch on the sustaining power of female friendship and how a woman copes with mid life and onwards. Prue's narrative voice is warm, witty, wise, very accessible. Her characters are sympathetic and engaging: very different women but each with demons to face as she gets older and confronts a future without - perhaps - a man in it. Her knowledge of food and business adds detail and zest, enriching an already compelling tale.'Sophie Kinsella for grown-ups' Daily Express. * Daily Express *
'A book not to miss... an uplifting tribute to female friendship' Good Housekeeping. * Good Housekeeping *
'Prue Leith tackles this previously unexplored area with sympathy and gusto Post 40 and 50 there is, as this novel suggests, much to play for' 'With cooking very much on people's minds who more appropriate to share some time with than restaurateur-turned-novelist Prue Leith ...alongside her insights into the subject of later-in-life romance, Leith's love of all things culinary shines through the text' Daily Mail. * Daily Mail *
'A rattling good read. If this novel was a meal it would be a light and fluffy souffl A perfect choice to brighten up those dark nights. Recommended' Edinburgh Evening News. * Edinburgh Evening News *
Prue Leith came to London from South Africa when she was twenty. As a cook, restaurateur, food writer and business woman, she has played a key role in the revolution of Britain's eating habits since the Sixties and is a role model for women of the baby boomer generation. But she has always wanted to write fiction, and this is her fourth novel. She lives in Notting Hill, London.