Deep France: A Writer's Year in the Bearn

Deep France: A Writer's Year in the Bearn

by Celia Brayfield (Author)

Synopsis

Novelist Celia Brayfield had never lived more than a taxi ride from Soho, until one day she decided to take a year off. With the computer and the cats in the back of the car, and the blessing of her student daughter, she drove South until the dawn came up in the Bearn, the most romantic, remote and rustic region of France. DEEP FRANCE is the diary of a writer's year in a tiny French village, trying to meet her deadlines when a good thunderstorm could blow out the computer and there were always artichokes to pick. It's a walk in the swashbuckling footsteps of The Three Musketeers and King Henri IV, full of funny and perceptive anecdotes about the year in which France had to face the euro, the World Cup and Le Pen's presidential campaign. DEEP FRANCE is also about the love affair between the British and the Australians, the New Zealanders, the South Africans, the Canadians, the Americans, the Irish, and even the Russians and rural France. Grand passion or sad delusion? Mutual adoration or unrequited love? An author who writes living, breathing novels capable of making us laugh, weep and marvel' The Times 'Her writing glitters: the humour is as sharp as a Sabatier knife' Image

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More Information

Format: Unabridged
Pages: 384
Edition: Main Market
Publisher: Pan
Published: 21 May 2004

ISBN 10: 0330411829
ISBN 13: 9780330411820

Author Bio
Celia Brayfield is the author of nine novels including the international bestseller, Pearls, as well as a non-fiction guide to storytelling in popular fiction, Bestseller. Before becoming a full-time novelist, she wrote for the Evening Standard and The Times. She has one daughter, with whom she now lives in west London.