The Scandal of the Season

The Scandal of the Season

by SophieGee (Author)

Synopsis

A Dazzling Story of Risk and Dangerous Liasions. Beautiful, clever Arabella Fermor is seduced by charming Robert Petre, seventh baron of Ingatestone. Eager to secure herself a rich and handsome husband, Arabella cannot guess that the enigmatic robert is entwined in a treasonous plot against Queen Anne. Watching the pair from the outskirts is a crippled man destined to become the genius of his age - the poet Alexander Pope. In Arabella and Robert's flirtations he has found the tale of temptation, coquetry and danger that might just make his fortune...

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: 0
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 07 Aug 2008

ISBN 10: 0099507293
ISBN 13: 9780099507291
Book Overview: A seductive novel about risk and dangerous liaisons in a time of Jacobite plots and Popish fears, when marriage was a market, and sex was a temptation fraught with danger, The Scandal of the Season is a brilliant, witty modern love-story - but set in 1711.

Media Reviews
Convincing, seductive and utterly absorbing, Sophie Gee's debut will transport its readers * Observer *
Secret ambition, hidden hurts, put-downs lobbed by the socially insecure; all of these appear... For anyone who enjoyed Shakespeare in Love or Dangerous Liaisons, The Scandal of the Season is a treat; rich and satisfying * Economist *
Gee knows her period inside out, and recreates it with a kind of loving joy...shows us a society in action rather than merely describing it * Guardian *
Sophie Gee has recreated the real-life scandal that inspired Pope's The Rape Of The Lock to clever, sexy effect, spinning a tale that will appeal to fans of Tracy Chevalier * Daily Mail *
A clever and inviting piece of critical biography masquerading as a light comedy of manners * New York Times *
Author Bio
Born in Sydney in 1974, Sophie Gee was brought up and educated in the inner-city suburb of Paddington, graduating from the University of Sydney in 1995 with a first-class honours degree in English. She won a scholarship to Harvard, where she wrote a doctoral thesis about pollution, filth and satire in eighteenth-century London. She received a PhD in 2002 and was immediately appointed as an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Princeton. Recently she held a research fellowship at UCLA and has recently taught at University College London before returning to Princeton.