From Publishers Weekly
Hatred and duty and their effect on an English family in 1960 are the themes of Cookson's 14th novel (after The Maltese Angel). Ill-matched Daniel and Winifred Coulson have become enemies. Their children?Stephen, the retarded eldest; Joe, the adopted family rock; Donald, the youngest?all show the scars. Daniel, who has discreet affairs, has begun to consider leaving his miserable marriage for Maggie, the family cook. He has meddled in his sons' lives to get Donald away from Winifred's possessiveness, finagling a match between lovely Annette and Donald that culminates in marriage. All this hurts Joe, whose conflicting loves for the girl and for his brother are becoming nearly too much to bear. Then the newlyweds have a terrible accident leading to tragic consequences that render Winifred insane, and she plots a grisly revenge on her daughter-in-law. Cookson adeptly paints a stark, psychologically realistic portrait of the disintegration of the Coulson clan. The only flaw is the surprise of Winifred's violence, which doesn't quite follow from her characterization. A somber, affecting story for the author's large audience.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
The latest of many from Cookson (e.g., The Maltese Angel, LJ 10/1/94) tells of the Coulson family, circa 1960. Winifred and Daniel Coulson have three sons; retarded Stephen, adopted Joe, and Donald, who is adored and idolized by his mother. The story opens on the eve of Donald's wedding to Annette Allison, an event that was to set Donald free from his mother's obsessive love. As the happy couple are on their way to a new life, fate in the form of a pantechnicon (i.e., a furniture moving van) changes the lives of everyone in the Coulson household. This is a story of love, hatred, duty, a mother's twisted obsession, jealousy, madness, religious mania, and all the wonderful ingredients we have learned to love and look for in a Cookson novel. For most popular collections.?Dawn L. Anderson, North Richland Hills P.L., Tex.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.