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A work of astonishing illumination and delight...so edgy, bright and subversive about women's inner lives and experience. Francine Prose,New York Times Book Review
ANew York TimesNotable Book
InThe Summer Housetrilogy, three very different women, with three very distinct perspectives, narrate three very witty novels concerning one disastrous wedding in the offing.
The Clothes in the Wardrobe: Nineteen-year-old Margaret feels more trepidation than joy at the prospect of her marriage to forty-year-old Syl.
The Skeleton in the Cupboard: Syl’s mother, Mrs. Monro, doesn’t know quite what to make of her son’s life, but she knows Margaret should not marry him.
The Fly in the Ointment: And then there’s Lili, the free spirit who is determined that the wedding shall not happen, no matter the consequences.
Her style is succinct, her humor dry Unputdownable. The Spectator
The subtlety of James, the comedy of Spark, the penetratingand the deep, unflinchingeye of Jane Austen. Kirkus Reviews
A witty and original writer. Times Literary Supplement
Inspired malice...Alice Thomas Ellis only bothers with the things that really bother her. That's why her novel is short. That's why her novel is good. Victoria Glendinning inThe Times
It oozes enjoyable malice. Observer
The glitter comes from Alice Thomas Ellis's mastery in keeping just the right distance between tones and undertones...This is a dark comedy. Sunday Times
Alice Thomas Ellis(19322005) was one of Britain's most widely admired writers. Her dozen novels includeThe 27th Kingdom, which was nominated for a Booker Prize, andThe Inn at the Edge of the World, which won the 1991 Writers' Guild Award for Best Fiction. She also published many essays and editedlÃo
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