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The Pearly Queen
The Pearly Queen
Sep 23, 2024 5:16 AM

Author:Mary Jane Staples

The Pearly Queen

A wonderfully warm, uplifting and moving saga from multi-million copy seller Mary Jane Staples. Perfect for fans of Maggie Ford, Kitty Neale and Katie Flynn. Perfect to settle down with!

READERS ARE LOVING THE PEARLY QUEEN!

'I couldn't put it down' - 5 STARS

'I really enjoyed this book from start to finish' - 5 STARS

'Good plot and believable characters. Thoroughly enjoyed this book' - 5 STARS

'Fantastic' - 5 STARS

'A very light and refreshing story!' - 5 STARS

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CAN SHE BE THE MOTHER THEY SO DESPERATELY NEED?

The Pearly Queen is really Aunt Edie. Everyone in Camberwell Green loves her Aunt Edie - especially the Andrews family.

Jack Andrews is having a tough time. Not long after he came back from the First World War, his wife decides to leave him and their three children to join Father Peter's League of Repenters - never to return.

Jack and the children manage as best they can, but things are pretty tough until Aunt Edie turns up. Having failed to convince her cousin, Maud Andrews, to come back, Edie moves in and takes over the Andrews family. For the first time in years life begin to look good again.

Aunt Edie: warm, generous, kind, and, above all, their very own Pearly Queen.

Reviews

She's a challenge to Josephine Cox

—— Bookseller

Short stories are de rigeur in the world of erotic fiction - they give a short, sharp blast of eroticism and leave the reader either sated or craving more

—— ETO

The hottest read in women's erotica.

—— Forum

There's enough variety to please erotica fans of every taste ... titillating entertainment

—— Romantic Times

The novel, a parody, sets itself up as a kind of Maoist Anna Karenina . . . At its core, Hard Like Water seeks to make a mockery of claims to political purity. As Hongmei and Aijun arouse each other with propaganda slogans and revolutionary citations, the novel pokes fun at how easily an ideology can be contorted to satisfy individual desires

—— Jennifer Wilson , New York Times

A piercing satire of Communism and the language of revolutions

—— Ángel Gurría-Quitana , Financial Times, *Books of the Year*

Yan probes the darkness and absurdity of Chinese society and history with a sexy satirical tale of the Cultural Revolution as wrought in a small village . . . distinctive and punchy. Yan's exuberant and unflinching tragicomedy is undeniably appealing

—— Publishers Weekly

Surreal and amusing, biting and fun

—— Caroline Overington , The Australian

A gritty, memorable story . . . Yan's study of power and class struggle becomes, in the end, a near-classic tragedy

—— Kirkus Review

Yan's signature biting wit creates another indelible work of bittersweet humor and socio-political insight

—— Booklist

Predicted to become a new future classic . . . this is a powerful, multi-faceted book that questions everything from marriage to sexual desire, power and the dangers of hubris

—— Clara Strunck , Buro

Gao Aijun, the narrator of this boisterous novel, set during the Cultural Revolution, finds his life charmless: his village is like "a pool of stagnant water," and his wife makes him feel "a clump of cotton" in his throat. Then he meets a beautiful woman, also married, and, to attract her, sets out to lead the "revolution" in their village. In speech larded with Mao quotes and traditional maxims, Gao reveals how their romance, fuelled by the feverish political climate, pitches the village into ever-escalating extremism -- a years-long parade of self-advancing schemes culminating in an unthinkable end

—— New Yorker
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