<i>The Weather in the Streets</i> astounded women and men with its searing depiction of what it's like to fall in love . . . <b>With brilliant dialogue and intense passages of elation and despair</b>, <i>The Weather in the Streets</i> takes you on the rollercoaster of their relationship
Sunday Telegraph
Lehmann is<b> unbeatable on social nuance</b>, both among the London bohemian set and Rollo's more conventional upper-class milieu. No one could be more attractive or caddish than Lehmann's Rollo, the married man who entrances our heroine. The<b> ultimate tragic love story</b>
A truly great book. It is <b>beautifully written, shrewdly observed and deftly crafted</b>, but the novel's real concern is what it means for a woman to live an authentic life
She is immensely readable, acute, passionate, funny and original
The first writer to filter her stories through a woman's feelings & perceptions
The <b>best book she has written</b> -- and with as good a chance for popular success as her first book, <i>Dusty Answer</i>
Kirkus Reviews