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Instances of the Number 3
Instances of the Number 3
Author: Salley Vickers, Phyllida Law
When a man dies and leaves behind a wife and a mistress, we expect certain responses to follow. But as the narrator of Salley Vickers's second novel explains, "this is not an account of feminine jealousy, or even revenge, and not all human beings (not even women) conform to the attitudes generally expected." Indeed, in this ironic and witty nove...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780754055341
ISBN-10: 0754055345
Publication Date: 9/2002
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Publisher: Chivers Press Ltd
Book Type: Audio CD
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
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From Publishers Weekly
The classic threesome husband, wife, mistress proves mathematically unstable in Vickers's profound comic novel (following her debut, Miss Garnet's Angel). When 62-year-old Londoner Peter Hansome dies in a car crash, his widow, Bridget, and his mistress, Frances, develop an awkward intimacy cemented by their shared loss. But before Bridget can come to terms with Peter's absence, a "breathtaking" young Iranian man named Zahin arrives to see Peter and winds up moving in as houseguest/housekeeper. Zahin is charming deferential and superhumanly industrious, he fills the air with the "satisfying scent of lavender Pledge" but there's also something unsettling about his presence, which drives Bridget to her Shropshire cottage, where she meets Stanley Godwit, a Shakespeare-loving chimney sweep. Frances, too, finds unexpected joy as she learns to make sense of life without Peter. But Peter is never actually gone, as his ghost watches over his former "consorts." This ghost is no jealous meddler; he's more ambiguous, prompting Bridget to meditate on the ambiguity of the ghost in Hamlet and on her own uneasy Catholicism. Though Vickers begins unpromisingly by adopting a pedantic tone, she abandons this posture soon enough, allowing her appealing characters to bloom as the world opens up to them in surprising but logical ways. Philosophical concerns are woven seamlessly with earthly incident, so that bad cocktail parties resonate and good bubble baths matter. In the tradition of the late Iris Murdoch, this extraordinary book will inspire and delight.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Following the accidental death of Peter Hansome, his wife and mistress come together in a relationship built more out of mutual curiosity than mutual affection. Bridget, the former wife, a shopkeeper whose wares include vintage clothing and goods, copes with her grief by purchasing a house in the country, befriending the local chimney sweep (whose occupation belies his literary bent), and taking in a mysterious Iranian student who claims to have been a protg of Peter. Frances, the mistress, is an art dealer who begins a tepid affair with a young sculptor and takes in the same Iranian student after Bridget throws him out. Both women are also haunted by the benign ghost of Peter, although only Bridget is aware of his presence. While not quite as charming as the wonderful Miss Garnet's Angel, this genial coming-of-middle-age novel should appeal to the same type of readers women of a certain age for whom a well-told story about intelligent women learning to deal with life's vicissitudes is the perfect cup of tea. For most public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/01.] Barbara Love, Kingston Frontenac P.L., Ont.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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