Author:Dinah Roe,Dinah Roe

The Pre-Raphaelite Movement began in 1848, and experienced its heyday in the 1860s and 1870s. Influenced by the then little-known Keats and Blake, as well as Wordsworth, Shelley and Coleridge, Pre-Raphaelite poetry 'etherialized sensation' (in the words of Antony Harrison), and popularized the notion ofl'art pour l'art - art for art's sake. Where Victorian realist novels explored the grit and grime of the Industrial Revolution, Pre-Raphaelite poems concentrated on more abstract themes of romantic love, artistic inspiration and sexuality. Later they attracted Aesthetes and Decadents like Oscar Wilde, Aubrey Beardsley and Ernest Dowson, not to mention Gerard Manley Hopkins and W.B. Yeats.
'TAKE A WALK ON THE WILD SIDE WITH ALISON TYLER - YOU WILL ENJOY THE TRIP'
—— THE ROMANCE REVIEW WEBSITEA fun, sexy read, with a definite post Sex and the City feel.
—— www.erotica-readers.comGripping and beautifully written
—— ScotsmanGrips the reader from the start... Lean, artful, assured
—— SpectatorJames Lasdun is a tremendous writer and Seven Lies is that rare thing, a novel that delivers on every level. It is so gripping that you want to gobble it down at a single sitting, and yet the prose is so exacting that you want to linger over every sentence
—— Geoff DyerThe descriptive brilliance leaves a lasting impression
—— Jonathan Derbyshire , Financial TimesLasdun's second novel has much of the thriller about it. But its more sinuous power comes from other duplicities in Stefan's previous life: a glorious section of the book involves his teenage self plagiarising Walt Whitman to impress his mother's salon, all the while bribing a pederast janitor with aquavit to gain access to the source material
—— Alex Clark , ObserverThe imaginativeness with which he explores the politics of expectation and failure runs deep...Seven Lies combines the knuckle-whitening tension of a thriller with literary wit and the precision of a surgeon seeking to tease out rotten flesh. Definitely a novel to be admired
—— EconomistSeven Lies...has a way of enlarging the spirit and refreshing the mind far more comprehensively than many books with twice its 200 pages
—— James Buchan , Guardian[T]his seems to be an artful evocation of the effect of totalitarianism on the individual. But if this sounds drably psychological, I am doing the novel a disservice: it is short, intense, powerful and superbly crafted
—— Chris Power , The TimesIntricately plotted and structured, its prose both elegant and poised, Seven Lies could be read as a fable about the political and spiritual corruption endemic in a totalitarian state. It is, however, very much concerned with the human cost of deception and betrayal
—— Tim Parks , Sunday TimesA brilliant and darkly funny tale of politics and paranoia
—— Christina Patterson , Independent






