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Overview
From the author of The Shoe Queen comes a jazz-age tale of love set in the world of London’s high society.
London, 1927. Diamond Sharp writes a racy newspaper column, using a fake name to conceal her identity. When she meets two charismatic American men who are bitter enemies, her life is turned upside down. She is drawn to both of them but isn’t sure whom she can trust. As she becomes increasingly involved with both, Diamond begins to uncover a nest of secrets that puts both her heart and her reputation at risk.
Blending the rich historical detail of Philippa Gregory’s novels with the sophisticated glamour of Sophie Kinsella’s Shopaholic books, The Jewel Box is romantic historical fiction at its finest.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
Sex and the City meets London's Roaring '20s in Davis's satisfying fifth novel. Grace Rutherford leads a double life: by day she's an advertising copywriter supporting a widowed sister and mother. By night, she's Diamond Sharp-a newspaper gossip columnist and glamorous lady about town. She adores her single status until she meets mysterious American author Dexter O'Connell, with whom she begins a steamy cat-and-mouse affair that turns her world upside down. The trouble? She's concurrently swept off her feet by her charming and equally delicious neighbor John Cramer-Dexter's bitter enemy. Grace is determined to get to the bottom of their hatred for each other. But whose story should she believe? To make matters worse, her sister is possibly falling for John, too. When Grace delves into their closets looking for skeletons, she realizes she must ultimately face her own. Davis, best known for The Shoe Queen, delights once again with this romp through pre-Manolo chick lit turf. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Library Journal
Set in the Roaring Twenties, like Davis's The Shoe Queen, this novel moves from Paris to London. Diamond Sharp puts her chosen wild lifestyle to good use writing a flapper-around-town column for a London newspaper, while at home she is Grace Rutherford, financially supporting her mother and sister. As the consequences of leading a dual life begin to pile up like unpaid bills, she's presented with two gorgeous American men at odds with each other, who also pull her in different directions. VERDICT Historical novels set in the 1920s are popular as genre fiction (see, for example, Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher mystery series), and fascination with the period continues to grow. This literary chick-lit stand-alone could give book clubs (questions are included) or beach readers diversion and discussion aplenty.—Mary K. Bird-Guilliams, Wichita P.L., KS
—Mary K. Bird-Guilliams