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The Rose Grower
The Rose Grower
Oct 22, 2024 2:04 AM

Author:Michelle de Kretser

The Rose Grower

In a corner of south-western France, a young rose grower nurtures a private passion to breed an exotic new flower. But the year is 1789, and the world is about to change...

The Rose Grower throws a subtle, slanting light on the underside of history, as a young woman and her family are caught up in the bloodthirsty years of the French Revolution.

Her private passion is to create a repeat-flowering crimson rose, the first of its kind in Europe. But, as public events in Paris are duplicated in Gascony, her world turns upside down. An American balloonist falls out of the sky and into her life; while Joseph, a young working-class doctor, is also drawn into her orbit, and finds himself fatally torn between reason and desire, revolutionary zeal and unrequited love.

Reviews

A meditative tale of unrequited love... De Kretser's writing is by turns poetic, metaphorical and delicately elliptical, capable of evoking a mood or change in direction in the subtlest of ways

—— Independent on Sunday

Beautifully written, full of wit, pathos and evocative images... There is a great deal to enjoy in this book. It opens magnificently... her final pages are a triumph

—— Guardian

Kretser's native style is clear, vigorous, sensitive to mood and cadence, and strongly narrative

—— Ursula Le Guin , Guardian

De Kretser is an elegant and accomplished storyteller

—— Daily Telegraph

A winner...enquiring and thoughtful

—— Independent

Westerman’s account of the Lipizzaners’ remarkable survival makes stirring reading. His tales of research in secret archives and encounters with wartime veterans who helped with Operation Cowboy have the subterfuge and tension of a thriller

—— Jane Shilling , Sunday Telegraph

Fascinating

—— Caroline Moorehead , Literary Review

Westerman offers a reflective account of man’s obsession with the prized Lipizzaner horse

—— Sunday Telegraph

Westerman’s tale, part historical journey, part travel tome, takes the reader across Europe to explore every avenue of the Lipizzaner’s eclectic history

—— Good Book Guide

The authors shred the myths in which Mao's national and international reputation rested... Jung Chang and John Halliday have done this extraordinary country a huge service with this book, which will one day be read as widely inside China as it will deservedly be in the outside world

—— Chris Patten , The Times

A magisterial work... This magnificent biography methodically demolishes every pillar of Mao's claim to sympathy or legitimacy... A triumph

—— New York Times Book Review

An important book in ways not envisaged... A work of unanswerable authority

—— Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Jung Chang and Jon Halliday enter a savage indictment drawing on a host of sources, including important Soviet ones, to blow away the miasma of deceit and ignorance which still shrouds Mao's life from many Western eyes... Jung Chang delivers a cry of anguish on behalf of all of those in her native land who, to this day, are still not free to speak of these things

—— Max Hastings , Sunday Telegraph

Demonstrating the same pitilessness that they judge to be Mao's most formidable weapon, they unstitch the myths that sustained him in power for forty years and that continue to underpin China's regime... I suspect that when China comes to terms with its pastthis book will have played a role

—— Nicolas Shakespeare , Telegraph

Chilling... Impressive... An extremely compelling portrait of Mao that will still shock many

—— Christian Science Monitor

Decisive biography...they have investigated every aspect of his personal life and career, peeling back the layers of lies, myths, and what we used to think of as facts... What Chang and Halliday have done is immense and surpasses, as a biography, everything that has gone before

—— Jonathan Mirsky , Independent

An irresistible, revelatory read

—— Herald

A riveting read

—— Christie Hickman , Sunday Express

I thrilled to Sarah Wise’s Inconvenient People, an enthralling study of those who fell foul of Victorian mad-doctors and greedy relatives

—— Philip Hoare , Sunday Telegraph

It makes for a harrowing read, but much of it is also hilarious, and as gripping as the most lurid Victorian melodramatic novel. Yet again, one closes a book with the impression that beneath the polished mahogany surfaces and shimmering silks of Victorian interiors lurked Hell itself

—— A. N. Wilson , Mail on Sunday
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