Author:Danielle Steel
Coco Barrington is the black sheep of her unusual Hollywood family. Having dropped out of law school, she works as a dog walker in North California. Her widowed mother, mega-bestselling author Florence Flowers, has just begun a secret romance with a man twenty-four years her junior, and her sister, Jane, one of Hollywood's top producers has lived with her partner, Liz, for 10 years
When Coco reluctantly agrees to house-sit in Jane's luxurious home, she discovers how much things can change in just a matter of days. Jane's house comes complete with an unexpected houseguest: Leslie Baxter, a dashing but down-to-earth British actor who's fleeing his psycho ex-girlfriend. Their attraction is immediate.
Suddenly Coco is seeing things differently...
Mr Sabatini's novel of the French Revolution has all the colour and lively incident which we expect in his work
—— ObserverOne wonders if there is another storyteller so adroit at filling his pages with intrigue and counter-intrigue, with danger threaded with romance, with a background of lavish colour, of silks and velvets, of swords and jewels
—— Daily TelegraphScaramouche is a wonderfully adventurous story... a splendid novel, whose author fully deserved the fame and fortune it brought him... He gave us great stories and this one, for me, is his best.
—— Bernard Cornwell[Sabatini] is to be learned from by any who seek instruction in the craft of writing or the matter of history. This century has seen no greater expert in the two combined
—— George Macdonald FraserMr. Rafael Sabatini is one of the most picturesque of romantic writers and has also a sound equipment as a historian
—— Daily ExpressThe plot is terrific and the pace fast and furious...A terrific story told by a master storyteller
—— Historical Novels ReviewThis book describes the panic of losing a child… The engulfing destructive pain is brilliantly explored
—— Alison Steadman , WeekThe Child in Time is a dense, atmospheric book as much concerned with philosophical debate as with plot.
—— Daily TelegraphThe Child in Time is an extraordinary achievement in which form and content, theory and practice, are so expertly and inseparably interwoven that the novel becomes an advertisement for, or proof of, its own thesis.
—— Sheila Macleod , GuardianA book of great maturity, beautifully alive to the fragility of happiness and all forms of violence... Everyone should read Saturday
—— Financial TimesThe supreme novelist of his generation
—— Sunday TimesDazzling... Profound and urgent
—— ObserverA brilliant novel.It is McEwan writing on absolute top form
—— Daily MailRefreshing and engrossing, dense with revelation. Superb
—— Independent on SundayA rich book, sensuous and thoughtful... McEwan has found in Saturday the right form to showcase his dazzling talents
—— The TimesMcEwan is word-perfect at handling the awkward comedy of this relationship and, as ever, turning it into something far more disturbing
—— ObserverTwo characters so vibrant they step straight off the page
—— Yvonne Cassidy , The TabletMcEwan's brilliance as a novelist lies in his ability to isolate discrete moments in life and invest them with incredible significance
—— Tim Adams , ObserverMcEwan's style is lean and clear...every sentence feels carefully crafted, the words all perfectly in place
—— John Harding , Daily MailA tightly focused human drama... McEwan gives the reader access to both characters' thoughts with his usual skill, and the comedy of embarrassment, or of the kind of erotic misunderstanding that Milan Kundera used to specialise in, quickly disappears as the marital bed begins to seem more and more ominous... The bedroom scene itself is carried off brilliantly
—— Christopher Taylor , Sunday TelegraphA fine book, homing in with devastating precision on a kind of Englishness which McEwan understands better than any other living writer, the Englishness of deceit, evasion, repression and regret. In On Chesil Beach McEwan has combined the intensity of his narrowly focused early work with his more expansive later flowered to devastating effect
—— Justin Cartwright , Independent on SundayMcEwan is the kind of author who can say more in a sentence than most can say in a chapter...This is a thoughtful book which provokes thought. But more immediately than that, this is a book which, while managing to be very funny, gives us a wonderful and moving portrait of a specific time, and two of its hostages, and of how to make a mess of love
—— Keith Ridgeway , Irish TimesMcEwan conveys the near-numinous significance of a single moment with quiet, almost unbearable grace
—— MetroA heavenly read
—— Marie Claire