The Lady Tree
By (Author) Christie Dickason
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
20th December 1999
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Historical fiction
813.54
Paperback
544
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 35mm
369g
A magnificent novel that vividly evokes the atmosphere of a seventeenth century English country estate, and the seething intrigue of Rembrandt's Amsterdam where the population is in the grip of a fever of tulip trading. It is the Summer of 1636. In England botanist John Nightingale hides from his dangerous past at Hawkridge House, deep in the tranquillity of the countryside. In Holland, the population is gripped by a fever of speculation. Fortunes are gambled on the commodity markets, trading in spices, grain and even rare tulips. Blackmailed into leaving Hawkridge to join an elaborate money-making scheme in Amsterdam, a city of frenzied greed and luxury, haunted by the ever-nearer demons of his past, and falling in love with two very different women, John Nightingale must learn quickly the ways of the world.
The botanical warfare and historical accuracy is an ingenious diversion from a love affair ripening sweetly under your nose. To be read with bulb catalogue in one hand and the other poised for page turning
Mail on Sunday
Christie Dickason was born in America but also lived as a child in Thailand, Mexico and Switzerland. Harvard-educated, and a former theatre director and choreographer (with the Royal Shakespeare Company and at Ronnie Scotts among others), she lives in London with her family.