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The President's Child
Hodder and Stoughton First British Edition, 1982 Published in the U.S. by Doubleday, 1983 | |
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From the book jacket:
From her first novel The Fat Woman's Joke (published in 1967 and reprinted twice last year) to her most recent books, Praxis and Puffball, Fay Weldon has throughout her career been a writer to surprise, and that is certainly true of her mesmerising and powerful new book. Isabel Acre's journey through life has taken her from the Australian outback via the beds and alleys of Fleet Street and she seamier side of Washington high life to a comfortable home in London, a reputation as a serious journalist, and a husband in the new chore-sharing, child-reading mould. Suddenly, however, the past which Isabel had thought safely behind her becomes the sources of actual physical danger. With frightening ease, the worlds of political intrigue and murderous conspiracy intrude into the cosiness of her domestic life. Whom can she trust? Man? When she reveals to her husband that she long ago had an affair with a young American senator, a man who is not challenging for the Presidential nomination itself, and that her son is the love-child of that affair, even she cannot foresee the consequences. Love got her into the predicament in which she finds herself; but can love now get her out of it? The President's Child is an unexpected book about unexpected things; about the way evil turns into good and back again; about truth at war with lies; about outer blindness and inner vision; about male power and female resistance to that power. Fay Weldon brilliantly exploits many of the conventions of the thriller genre in a novel which shows this important novelist at the height of her powers. Bio from the book jacket: Before she turned to novel writing, Fay Weldon was a highly successful copywriter and spent much of her advertising career at Ogilvy, Benson & Mather. She has also written plays and scripts for television (including the first of the Upstairs, Downstairs scripts), a six-part TV adaptation of Price and Prejudice, an award-winning radio play, Polaris, as well as several stage plays including 'Action Replay'. She has recently completed an eight-part adaptation for BBC television of Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy, and is currently writing a screenplay of Christina Stead's For Love Alone for an independent Australian film company. Fay Weldon is that rarity - someone who can write novels and plays at a continuous pace and yet produce work of the utmost quality. Married, with four sons - aged three to twenty-five - she is at present living in London. | |
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