Overview
From the author of The Inheritance and Secret Relations comes a Romeo and Juliet tale centering on a wonderful old English ancestral home that had once been a Cistercian abbey.
Almost a year on from the loss of their precious abbey, the Delancey family remains devastated. The abbey had been the uninterrupted home of Delanceys since the sixteenth century. To compound the insult, they have lost it to their archenemies: the family of their old gardener, Stanley Trafford---who was dismissed and evicted, along with his family, by Laura’s grandfather Edmund in 1947. But now Stanley’s son is a millionaire, intent on avenging his father. . . . Stanley Trafford and Edmund Delancey were boyhood friends. When both men married, just before the war, the couples became inseparable, with the two women---Hester and Effie---offering comfort to each other while their husbands fought in the same regiment. So what really happened on that fateful morning in 1947, to poison their friendship for nearly forty years? This magical story follows two warring families---the Traffords and the Delanceys---over the course of one devastating year, in which old secrets catch them up and turn everything upside down.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
Three generations of two warring families collide when young Laura Delancey returns from a lengthy trip to India and finds her family greatly changed. The Delanceys had ruled their corner of the English countryside for centuries, but their fortunes have declined. A decades-old feud between them and the Traffords, their former gardener's family, is the source of much tension, and only Stanley Trafford, the former gardener, knows the truth about the rift. Bad blood has carried through the generations, and as the Delanceys' finances diminished, the Trafford family, thanks to business-savvy son Mark, achieved wealth and bought out the Delanceys' gorgeous ancestral abbey as payback. To make things worse, the Delanceys now live in a cramped lodge on the property. Laura's return and a troublesome but short-lived affair provide the catalyst for old wounds to be opened and secrets to be revealed. Though the wrapup is painfully neat and the dark secrets aren't that dark, Dilke (The Inheritance) exploits the British class system to its fullest potential. (Apr.)
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