The Lotus Eaters

The Lotus Eaters

by Marianne Mac Donald (Author)

Synopsis

In Beverley Hills in 1998, British celebrity interviewer Lottie meets Patty Belle, a minor Hollywood actress. In the scorching heat, as she drinks her Virgin Mary and her companion sips champagne, Lottie immediately recognises and responds to Patty Belle's magnetic appeal. But they are not to meet again until many months later back in London, when they become flatmates. Patty is in love with being in love. Strikingly beautiful, she both knows, and at some level is entirely unaware of, the impact she has on men. As she falls for one after another of Lottie's male friends, destroying relationships and marriages, she can only say 'But we couldn't help ourselves!'. Eventually Patty manages to destroy even her friendship with Lottie as with everyone else she has ever been close to, except those most damaging to her. A Marilyn for 90s London, she is lovable, infuriating, and naive as a child. Patty is a girl about town with the unforgettable charm of Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffany's, Sally Bowles in Goodbye to Berlin and Lorelei Lee in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Set against the London of the dotcom boom and the USA of Clinton's impeachment, The Lotus Eaters is a stunning and deceptively sophisticated novel.

$4.15

Save:$11.08 (73%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: William Heinemann
Published: 01 Mar 2007

ISBN 10: 0434016144
ISBN 13: 9780434016143
Book Overview: A marvellous first novel of London in the 90s. Its starlet heroine Patty Belle is a Marilyn for our time, damaged and irresistible.

Media Reviews
Patty Belle is a wonderful character, sexual, charismatic, damaged and innocent - the girl whom everyone wants and no-one truly loves... A story which is as gripping as it is poignant. * Helen Dunmore *
Marianne Macdonald is to the Nineties what Alan Hollinghurst is to the Eighties: her book seeps with desire and disappointment and betrayal... Her heroine, like Daisy in The Great Gatsby, is a bright light against which men, the hopeless creatures, batter themselves, while the sensible among us look on, helpless. A brilliant, unsettling novel * Liz Jones *
Author Bio
Marianne Macdonald read English at New College, Oxford, where she was named Guardian/NUS Student Journalist of the Year. She was the Independent's first trainee and went on to become an interviewer on the Observer's Life magazine. She was runner up for Interviewer of the Year in 1997 and has interviewed Hunter S. Thompson, Sean Penn, Gorbachev, Leonardo DiCaprio and Billy Bob Thornton, among others. She lives in West London.