From Library Journal
Lewis works in television production in London, and is the author of two popular romantic suspense novels, A Class Apart (HarperCollins, 1990) and Dance While You Can (HarperCollins, 1991). Her third book has rough vitality but it's far too long, with endless passages of explicit sex and sadomasochistic violence. Two young cousins from Bristol--plain, intelligent Marian and beautiful stripper Madeleine--find themselves on a collision course when they both fall for Paul, an ambitious would-be novelist with a cruel streak. Paul and Madeleine run off together to launch their careers, stealing Marian's lottery winnings. The bereft Marian lands a job with a film company and travels to New York, Paris, and Florence--only to encounter her cousin and lover under perilous circumstances. Public libraries should skip this novel and stock up on extra copies of novels by Jackie Collins or Pat Booth instead.
- Joyce Smothers, Monmouth Cty. Lib., Manalapan, N.J.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
The London-based author of Dance While You Can (p. 132), etc., presents a contemporary romance/suspense that moves between England, New York, and Italy. Plain-jane Marian Deacon works as a secretary and lives in Bristol with her blond-bombshell cousin Madeleine. The trouble starts when Madeleine sets her sights on Paul O'Connell, a handsome and enigmatic writer. To her chagrin, Paul prefers mousy Marian, and the two begin a chaste romance. But when Marian leaves town to visit her widowed mother, Madeleine manages to make off with Marian's sizable lottery winnings--and with Paul as well. She uses the money to launch a modeling career, and soon her face and voluptuous body are plastered all over billboards and magazines. Meanwhile, a heartbroken Marian makes the acquaintance of a brilliant director, Matthew Cornwall, whose producer girlfriend Stephanie invites Marian to work on the film she and Matthew are making--the subject of which is a rich, beautiful, and artistically talented girl named Olivia Hastings who mysteriously disappeared some years earlier. Marian becomes obsessed with finding out what really happened to Olivia, and her probing uncovers some despicable secrets that connect Paul to a sinister bottega where beautiful young women are murdered and then dissected in order to create macabre yet compelling marble sculptures. Madeleine, chosen as the next victim, will be saved--though not before her lovely face is hideously disfigured--by Marian and Matthew Cornwall. Finally, of course, Paul is brought to justice--and the cousins are reunited. Overlong, tedious, and improbable to the point of absurdity: a first-class lemon that's in no way saved by its British accent. --
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