This deliciously waspish — actually, hilarious — story of a destructive Oxford academic family has stayed with me longer than many did. Pure, very wicked joy

- Andrew Holgate, The Sunday Times

A superb, hilarious farce of dysfunctional academic family life . . . Funny, exciting, lyrical, poignant, redemptive

The Guardian

Brilliant and witty . . . Mendelson’s second bewitchingly erotic and darkly dramatic novel confirms her as a stylish, perceptive chronicler of the heart’s hidden desires

Daily Mail

Se alle

Brilliant . . . exhilarating . . . Exciting and memorably written, this is one of those rare reads that has you galloping to the end, but feeling bereft at having to say goodbye so soon

Independent

An engaging combination of campus satire and domestic drama . . . In <i>Daughters of Jerusalem</i> Mendelson has created a blue-stocking thriller

The Daily Telegraph

Miss Marple meets Rosamond Lehmann . . . luscious prose and droll comedy . . . suffused with longing, studded with recherché words and clotted with gastronomic metaphors that make you feel that you should be reading on a chaise longe, stuffing yourself with violet creams

The Observer

Savagely funny and hilariously cruel, it . . . convinces through the sheer power of the writing

The Sunday Times

A delicious tale of intrigue and betrayal

The Big Issue

Bold . . . engaging . . . an undoubted talent for comic observation

The Times

A witty and absorbing work of fiction . . . wonderful . . . surprising and satisfying

The Times Literary Supplement

Written with great sharpness and has thrilling detail

- Julia Darling,

Beautifully written and bitingly funny, Charlotte Mendelson's prize-winning Daughters of Jerusalem is a gripping novel of hidden love and hate, of the desire to belong, and the need for escape.

Amidst the crumbling yellow stone of Oxford and its prestigious university, secrets are stirring within the Lux family home . . .

Jean, the constrained and guilt-ridden wife of an academic, is waiting for excitement – and it will come from an unexpected source.

Eve, Jean's intelligent eldest daughter, luxuriates in wounded murderous jealousy of her younger sister and is on the brink of snapping.

Raymond, the loathed rival of Jean's husband, begins to show interest in Eve.

And Helena, Jean's best friend, has a confession, the revelation of which may just alter everyone's lives forever.

'Brilliant and witty . . . Mendelson's second bewitchingly erotic and darkly dramatic novel confirms her as a stylish, perceptive chronicler of the heart's hidden desires' - Daily Mail

'Superb . . . funny, exciting, lyrical, poignant, redemptive' - Guardian

Les mer
Behind a crumbling facade of normality, secrets begin to stir within the Lux family home in Charlotte Mendelson's prize-winning novel <i>Daughters of Jerusalem</i>
The beautiful, hilarious, prize-winning second novel from acclaimed author Charlotte Mendelson.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781035020188
Publisert
2023-08-17
Utgiver
Vendor
Picador
Vekt
240 gr
Høyde
196 mm
Bredde
130 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336

Biographical note

Charlotte Mendelson's novels include Daughters of Jerusalem, When We Were Bad, Almost English, and The Exhibitionist. She has won both the Somerset Maugham Award and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, has been longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, and has been longlisted and shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction. She is also the author of one work of non-fiction, Rhapsody in Green, and is the gardening correspondent for The New Yorker. She lives in London.