Author:Louisa May Alcott
'I often feel as if I'd gladly sell my soul to Satan for a year of freedom. '
Rosamond Vivian has been brought up as a recluse on a remote island off the English coast. When Phillip Tempest - charming, devastatingly handsome and almost twice Rosamond's age - mysteriously appears one stormy night he finds a peach ripe for the plucking. 'I am willing to pay for my pleasure if necessary,' Rosamond asserts boldly, but nothing can prepare her for the life that Phillip Tempest will lure her into sharing with him.
Instead of the freedom she craves, Rosamond finds herself caught up in the strange past of her new husband. Terrified of him and all he represents, she flees, adn so the chase begins - from Parisian garret to a mental asylum, from convent to chateau. But Phillip Tempest has never allowed anything to escape him, and Rosamond has become his obsession.
A compusive tale of love, desire and deceit, The Chase was considered too sensational to be published during Louisa may Alcott's lifetime. Its discovery after more than a century marks a new page in literary history.
wonderful entertainment...a suspenseful and thoroughly charming story
—— Stephen KingIt challenges comparison with some of the world's most bizarre masterpieces
—— Financial TimesPatrick White is, in the finest sense, a world novelist. His themes are catholic and complex and he persues them with a single-minded energy and vision
—— Robert Nye , GuardianLike all first-class comedians, he is deadly serious
—— Terry Eagleton , StandIn his major postwar novels, the pain and earnestness of the individual’s quest for ‘meaning and design’ can be felt more intensely than perhaps anywhere else in contemporary Western prose
—— Sunday TimesAn antipodean King Lear writ gentle and tragicomic, almost Chekhovian . . . an intensely dramatic masterpiece.
—— The Australian