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Editorial Consultants
I have known both Elizabeth Buchan and Rachel
Hore for many years and am fortunate to have them as consultants
to my service. Their wide range of experience as commissioning editors,
reviewers for national newspapers and as novelists themselves enables
us together to offer authoritative and up-to-date advice.
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Elizabeth Buchan
Elizabeth Buchan lives in London with her husband
and two children. She began her career as a blurb writer for Penguin
Books and, later, become a Fiction Editor at Random House. Initially,
she juggled writing with motherhood and her publishing career but,
after the publication of her third novel, gave up publishing to
become a full-time writer. She has never regretted it.
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Her books include: Beatrix
Potter: The Story of the Creator of Peter Rabbit, a
biography for children, and a series of adult novels. These include: Light
of the Moon which took as its subject an undercover
agent operating in occupied France during the Second World War
and the prizewinning Consider the Lily which
was described by the Sunday Times as: ‘the literary equivalent
of the English country garden’. Her subsequent novels, Perfect
Love, Against Her Nature and Secrets
of the Heart were all widely reviewed.
Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman went
straight into the bestseller lists and television rights were snapped
up. Its subject –
a middle-aged woman struggling, and succeeding, to get her life
back on course – has touched a nerve, both nationally and
internationally, and the feedback has been huge. Looking at marriage
from a different point of view, The Good Wife also
featured in the bestseller lists for many week and was described
by USA Today as ‘visceral and on the mark’. Following That
Certain Age, her new novel is a sequel to Revenge
of the Middle Aged Woman. Elizabeth Buchan has reviewed for the main national
newspapers, including the Sunday Times, The Times and the Daily
Mail. She has sat on the committee for the Society of Authors and
was Chairman of the judges for the 1997 Betty Trask Award and a
judge for the l997 Whitbread Awards. Her short stories have been
published in various magazines and broadcast on BBC Radio 4.
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The Second Wife
The rules currently governing my life are these:
rule number one - there is no justice; rule number two - contrary
to a husband's hopes, a second wife does not have the Karma Sutra
tucked into her handbag, it is more likely to be aspirin; rule number
three - never complain, particularly if you have been instrumental
in demonstrating rule number one; and rule number four - never serve
liver or tofu, it is not clever. It isn't easy stepping into someone
else's shoes especially those of your husband's first wife. Minty
is finding married life as Mrs Nathan Lloyd a nightmare not least
because his close friends and family (including his children) hate
her. But for Minty, the biggest obstacle of all is Rose, her husband's
ex-wife. Glowing and successful, Rose has experienced a spectacular
rebirth and as Minty soon discovers, she also has quite a hold over
Nathan. With Buchan's signature gift for capturing women's daily
joys and struggles, "The Second Wife" is an irresistible
story of love, loss, and renewal that explores the very nature of
friendship and the bonds that sometimes grow strongest when stretched
to breaking.
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Rachel Hore
Rachel Hore worked in
London publishing for nearly twenty years, most latterly as Senior
Editorial Director, Fiction, at HarperCollins Publishers.
Authors
she edited there included Cathy Kelly, Barbara Erskine, Sidney Sheldon,
Craig Thomas, Jane Asher, Susan Howatch and Isabel Wolff. After
moving to Norfolk in 2001 with her family she has built a freelance
career that includes editing and advising authors, teaching at the
University of East Anglia and reviewing fiction for the Guardian.
www.rachelhore.co.uk
Titles: The
Dream House; The Memory Garden, The Glass Painter's Daughter ( Simon & Schuster)
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In a tiny stained-glass shop hidden in the backstreets of Westminster lies the cracked, sparkling image of an angel. The owners of Minster Glass have also been broken: Fran Morrison's mother died when she was a baby; a painful event never mentioned by her difficult, secretive father Edward. Fran left home to pursue a career in foreign cities, as a classical musician. But now Edward is dangerously ill and it's time to return. Taking her father's place in the shop, she and his craftsman Zac accept a beguiling commission - to restore a shattered glass picture of an exquisite angel belonging to a local church. As they reassemble the dazzling shards of coloured glass, they uncover an extraordinary love story from the Victorian past, sparked by the window's creation. Slowly, Fran begins to see her own reflection in its themes of passion, tragedy and redemption. Fran's journey will lead her on a search for the truth about her mother, through mysteries of past times and the anguish of unrequited love, to reconciliation and renewal.
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