1.34Kg of CO2
167 litre(s) of Water
0.01 Tree(s)
1 book donated to global literacy projects
Parlour Games
Parlour Games
paperback
Published:
28 February, 2017
Description
Celia, housewife, mother and wonderful cook, is celebrating her fortieth birthday. In her smart London home, her major worries are private schooling and the misplaced zeal of Neighbourhood Watch vigilantes. But the house of cards collapses around her, as friends and a sister turn edgy and fickle, a long-time admirer turns into a crude jester, and Celia spies her husband embracing a ghastly woman in a 'Come Dancing' frock.
A note from Mavis Cheek...
'A bit of a farce, set in an area of London not unlike Bedford Park, Chiswick (where I lived at the time) - and full of little and big scandals. A woman discovers her husband's infidelity and thinks she will have a go herself... Also funny, and banned from the Bedford Park Festival on the basis that 'nothing like that ever happens here' - whereupon, the following week, a judge really did run off with the au pair.'
Reviews
'A very funny book - one of those rare books that make you laugh out loud. Imagine the wicked social observation of Jilly Cooper mixed with the needle wit of Fay Weldon and you'll get the picture.' New Woman
'Cheek is a witty, original writer.' Sunday Telegraph
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781911295723 |
| ISBN10 | 1911295721 |
| Number Of Pages | 334 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Agora Books |
| Format | paperback |
Media Reviews
Mavis Cheek seems to have cracked the conundrum of how to write decent novels with popular appeal.' -- The Times
Mavis Cheek may well be the spokes-woman for a generation.' -- Observer
There has always been a touch of the Alan Bennett about Mavis Cheek. Both writers share an uncanny talent for capturing the cadences of the way we speak, and for re-creating them on the page so delicately and with such charm that it takes your breath away.' -- The Daily Mail
A very funny book - one of those rare books that make you laugh out loud. Imagine the wicked social observation of Jilly Cooper mixed with the needle wit of Fay Weldon and you'll get the picture.' -- New Woman
Mavis Cheek has a sharp ear and a wicked eye for the discreet lack of charm of the bourgeoisie.' -- The Times
Author's Bio
Mavis Cheek was born and grew up in Wimbledon. She began her working life with the contemporary art publishers, Editions Alecto. London was lively and creative in the 'sixties and when Editions Alecto opened a gallery in the West End of London, Mavis worked there with artists such as David Hockney, Allen Jones, Patrick Caulfield, Gillian Ayres, Bridget Riley - from which she learned about modern and contemporary art. After twelve happy years at Editions Alecto, Mavis left to study at Hillcroft College for Women from where she graduated in Arts with distinction. When her daughter Bella was born shortly after graduating she began her writing career in earnest. Journalism and travel writing at first, then short stories, and eventually, in 1988, her novel Pause Between Acts was published by The Bodley Head and won the She/John Menzies First Novel Prize. She has published fifteen novels and her short stories are in various collections.
Mavis has served on both PEN and The Society of Authors committees and was for three years the judge of the McKitterick Prize for Fiction. She is a Fellow of MacDowell Colony, USA and has been the Royal Literature Fund Fellow at both Chichester University and the University of Reading. She is also the Founder and Patron of the Marlborough Literature Festival which aims to put authorship, rather than celebrity, back at the heart of literature festivals. It has proved a resounding success and proves that good writing will always be admired and cherished.
Since 1989 Mavis has run residential courses for the Arvon Foundation; for the Centre for Literature at Ty Newydd in Wales; at Dartington; at Stratford on Avon, Beverley, Charleston Festivals, among others, and at Marlborough College and various other venues and institutions at home and abroad from palaces to prisons. She lives and works in London.