Author:Danielle Steel
After building an empire that has made her a legend in business, Olivia spends months each year planning a lavish holiday for everyone in her family to enjoy. This summer she has arranged a dream trip on a luxurious yacht in the Mediterranean, which she hopes will be the most memorable of all. More than anything, she hopes to express her love and her regret at all the important times she missed during her children’s early years.
But her younger daughter, Cassie, a hip London music producer, refuses the invitation altogether as she does every year. Liz, her older daughter, is preoccupied with a chance to recapture her dream of being a writer and is terrified of failure, again. And her sons John and Phillip work for her, for better or worse, with wives who wish they didn’t. Immersed in the splendour of the Riviera, this should be a summer to remember, but old resentments die hard, and Olivia is still running the business full-time.
As each of these individuals confront the past and the challenges of the present and future, they also learn to accept the enduring, unconditional love of their family – and a mother who is strong enough to take more than her fair share of the blame, and loving enough to accept them as they really are. The question is: can they do the same for her?
A camp clever tour de force… an alternative autobiography, a ghost story and a murder mystery all in one slim volume. Brilliant… the quintessence of Ackroyd
—— Sunday TelegraphA book full of rich and sudden moments of delight
—— The ScotsmanHarking back to Dickens... London is a major character in the novel. In Ackroyd's accomplished hands the city becomes a mystical place, where visions abound. Highly recommended.
—— Daily Mail* Cultural pick of the week *
—— Mail on SundayAckroyd is that timeless figure, a man of letters, dipped in ink, apparently versatile in a breathtaking variety of genres
—— ObserverLondon is the backdrop and the connecting fabric of these three lives, from bustling, cut-throat Fleet Street to hallowed London publishing houses, from the wealth and corruption of Chelsea to the smoky shadows of Limehouse and Hackney, this is an exploration of the city, peering down its streets, riding on its underground, and drinking in its pubs and clubs
—— The Beat That My Heart SkippedSuffused with Ackroyd’s intelligence and learning
—— Jessica Holland , ObserverAckroyd’s pen portraits of the intersecting worlds of academia, literary London and Fleet Street are written with relish
—— Laura Freeman , StandpointAn amalgam of social satire and noirish thriller...vintage Ackroyd
—— Ian Thomson , Financial TimesConsistently intriguing
—— Edmund Gordon , Times Literary SupplementSuperb... [Ackroyd] makes the familiar deliciously mysterious
—— SagaIn a slender novel, London's great fictional mapper Peter Ackroyd has woven together a rich spread of tales of the city
—— Tina Jackson , MetroAckroyd writes about the capital, from Camden to Chelsea, like no-one else and he captures the sense of the sixties perfectly, with high-society and low-life London so dangerously close to each other. Full of twists and turns, this is Ackroyd's most exciting novel to date
—— Good Book GuideA classic Ackroyd tale that will not fail to please
—— Victoria Clark, 4 stars , LadyWith its distinctive language, structure and narrative approach, Lenin's Kisses presents a distictive version of 'rural china' and 'revolutionary China', even while establishing a new literary 'native China'
—— Contemporary Literature CommentaryYan Lianke sees and describes his characters with great tenderness . . . this talented and sensitive writer exposes the absurdity of our time
—— La CroixSophie Hannah is a real star.
—— Daily TelegraphSophie Hannah has quickly established herself as a doyenne of the 'home horror' school of psychological tension, taking domestic situations and wringing from them dark, gothic thrills.
—— Financial TimesHannah is a master of intense psychological thrillers . . . Full of twists and turns, and terrifying, too.
—— heatShe grips from start to finish - a grip which held me against my will because the sustained atmosphere of mild hysteria is hard to take . . . I couldn't put it down.
—— Literary ReviewPynchon’s latest novel is a historical romance set in during the internet’s infancy in the spring of 2001.
—— Jo Ellison and Violet Henderson , VogueBleeding Edge is a romp. On full display are Pynchon’s trademark linguistic and imaginative acrobatics… It may sound frivolous but an emotional maturity counterpoints the silly songs, deliberately bad puns, and pop-cultural references
—— Irish ExaminerWhen he’s in his hardboiled vein, [Pynchon] writes the most entertaining dialogue in any year.
—— Tom Stoppard , GuardianPynchon's best novel since Mason & Dixon, an exhilarating shaggy-dog private-detective story that punctured its own garrulous charm with sharp stabs of betrayal and threat. Astonishing, too, that that a 76-year-old should produce a novel with such wild and slangy bounce.
—— Tim Martin , TelegraphPynchon at his most hilarious, it gave way to more sombre realities involving a suspicious Silicon Alley tech company and its possible links to international terrorism and who knows what else.
—— UncutSuspenseful and darkly humorous.
—— Michael Dirda , Times Literary SupplementIntriguing, and probably the most straightforwardly readable of his books.
—— Gordon Brewer , HeraldA thrilling ride through the first tech bubble, filled with "bleeding edge" technology... Accomplished, funny and digressive.
—— Financial TimesPynchon's take on the attack on the Twin Towers. Will he reject the conspiracy theories of the "truthers" or spin some new conspiracies of his own? I think the answer is both. But I wouldn't swear to it.
—— Gordon Brewer , Scotsman· Pynchon delivered a piece of typically raggedy brilliance with Bleeding Edge.
—— Stuart Kelly , ScotsmanEngrossing, hilarious and shocking.
—— Jonathan Jones , GuardianPynchon’s high-energy writing crackles with dark wit and foreboding
—— Mail on SundayPlayful and paranoid New York noir
—— Adam Boulton , New StatesmanReaders will have to decide for themselves how they feel about an open-ended mystery, but for those who don’t care so much about the destination, the journey is more than worth it
—— Stephen Joyce , Nudge