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THE ENGLISH LADY MURDERERS' SOCIETY Janet Bretherton, a widow at
60, suspected of her husband’s murder and involvement in the fraud
which brought his company down, exiles herself to Puybrun, a small
village in a picturesque corner of south-west France, where she nurses
her grief and tries to rebuild her shattered world. She meets six other
Englishwomen who live the expatriate life. Earthy has fled from a hippy
camp in a damp corner of Wales. Carol claims to have slept with every
man in the world called Dave. Belle has a husband, Charlie, who may or
may not be real because no one has ever seen him. Joy is married to the
appalling Arnold. And Veronica and Poppy try to discover the basis for
the love they have for each other. The women form a group in which they
take turns to teach each other the lessons life has taught them. At the
same time, they grow more confident and gradually reveal the secrets of
their pasts. When Janet finds she has
attracted the attention of Léon, thirty years younger than she is, yet
seems to find her still sexually desirable as he invites her to go
dancing with him, she asks herself: What are his real motives? And does
she care? In the end, the process of discovery reveals a terrible
secret which forces the women to decide how much they love each other:
how far they can rely upon each other... even when the question is one
of murder. The English Lady Murderers’ Society is a humorous and affectionate description of the solidarity of women in the face of the idiocy and unreliability of men. It celebrates the courage and beauty of older women. The author is familiar with the subject because he is married to one of them. |