Available Formats
Tree of Pearls
By (Author) Louisa Young
HarperCollins Publishers
Flamingo
14th September 2001
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Classic fiction: general and literary
823.914
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 14mm
177g
The final volume in the Angeline Gower trilogy, following Baby Love and Desiring Cairo. Our angel is back. Angeline Gower is back home in Britain, back safe, back in her own bath. And, right on cue, that's when trouble arrives, back for another bout with her. But this time she's going to see it off for good...There's trouble in the form of her nemesis, her Russian roulette -- wiseguy wideboy Eddie: he's on the loose again, and who would the police send out to Egypt to trace him if not Evangeline. Then there's trouble of another more painful, more joyful sort altogether: the trouble she has choosing between safe, solid, sensitive Harry, the father of her child, and hot, haughty, harmonious Sa'id, the father of her child. So, out among the sensuous wonders of Luxor, on the mobile and on the hoof, our angel shimmies and swerves with all her ex-belly dancer's supple style through a series of emotional chicanes. Now and again, in a particularly tight corner, she spins off, but she always regains control and surges forward to seize the life and future she deserves for those she loves and, triumphantly, for herself.
on Louisa Young's trilogy: 'Spectacularly worth reading' The Times 'Tough, tender, sexy, funny' Esther Freud 'Hits an all too rare note of intelligent escapism' She 'Streetwise and literate' Options 'Wry, perky, entertaining' The Observer 'Engaging, wise-cracking, likeable, brilliantly sustained... funny, humane and utterly readable, full of insights about the way we are' Good Housekeeping
Louisa Young contributes regularly to the Guardian and is also the author of A Great Task of Happiness (an acclaimed biography of her grandmother, the charismatic widow of Scott of the Antarctic). She lives in London with her daughter. the reviewers on on Louisa Young's trilogy: 'Spectacularly worth reading' The Times 'Tough, tender, sexy, funny' Esther Freud 'Hits an all too rare note of intelligent escapism' She 'Wry, perky, entertaining' The Observer 'Engaging, wise-cracking, likeable, brilliantly sustained funny, humane and utterly readable, full of insights about the way we are' Good Housekeeping