Weekend at Blenheim
Autor J. P. Morrisseyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2003
John Vanbrugh is an outsider in the England of 1905: A determined but unsuccessful American architect, he has moved to London to make a new life for himself and his wife, Margaret. When he receives an unexpected summons to meet the dazzling Duchess of Marlborough at Blenheim Palace, he is skeptical.
The young duchess, Vanbrugh comes to understand, has her reasons. Like him, she is American-born: Consuelo Vanderbilt, one of the richest debutantes in America. Seemingly on impulse, the duchess hires Vanbrugh to renovate her rooms at Blenheim--a plum job Vanbrugh accepts. He and his wife join the weekend party at Blenheim, a group that includes the foul-tempered duke; his young cousin Winston Churchill; the society painter John Singer Sargent; the duchess’s mother and American suffragette, Mrs. O.H.P. Belmont; Gladys Deacon, an American friend of the duchess; and the enigmatic Catholic Monsignor Vay de Vaya.
Almost as soon as he begins work at Blenheim, Vanbrugh uncovers a series of unsettling letters that hint at a long-concealed deceit. As he tries to grasp the meaning of this discovery, a sketchbook owned by Sargent is stolen and a young housemaid is found in the courtyard, strangled. It is then that Vanbrugh realizes he is caught in a maze of duplicity and manipulation with no way out. Struggling to uncover the treachery he sees around him, Vanbrugh is forced to reevaluate everything he thought about Blenheim, himself, even the very nature of truth.
Part mystery, part gothic morality tale, A Weekend at Blenheim is a compelling, mesmerizing, deeply satisfying novel.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 0312311389
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Ediția:First.
Editura: St. Martins Press-3pl
Notă biografică
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Praise for "A Weekend at Blenheim"
"I think it's safe to say that the present occupants of Blenheim Palace will blush with embarrassment or redden with rage when they read J. P. Morrissey's devastating portrayal of their ancestor, the ninth Duke of Marlborough, in his new novel, "A Weekend at Blenheim." It is a fascinating nightmare of ducal superiority, snobbery, and stupidity, as financed by his Vanderbilt heiress duchess and as witnessed by a poor American houseguest." --Dominick Dunne, author of "Another City, Not My Own "and "People Like Us"
""A Weekend at Blenheim" is a superb reconstruction of the aristocratic autumn of Edwardian England. More than this, it is a gripping tale of intrigue that breathes new life into the country house mystery' with well-drawn characters, a stylish narrative, and the sophisticated parallels drawn between the baroque art of the palace and the even more baroque lives of its inhabitants." --Iain Pears, author of "An Instance of the Fingerpost"
"J. P. Morrissey's descriptive powers are extraordinary and bring to life palaces and attics and paintings and gardens breathlessly." --William F. Buckley, Jr., author of "Saving the Queen "and "Stained Glass"
""A Weekend at Blenheim" is a remarkably engaging novel. Very few books manage to be this entertaining, clever, and well-written all at once. I recommend it heartily." --David Liss, author of "A Conspiracy of Paper"
""A Weekend at Blenheim" is an evocative, mesmerizing, turn-of-the-century page-turner that kept me enthralled and guessing word by word, from start to gasp-inducing last page." --Sarah Ban Breathnach, author of "Simple Abundance""