The Bulgari Connection
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
“[A] hilarious page-turner…Weldon’s diabolically clever satire of greed, fashion, sex, and age is smart entertainment of the highest order.”—Booklist
Grace has just been released from prison, where she was sent for trying to run over her ex-husband’s new wife with her Jaguar in a supermarket parking lot. It may make things a little awkward when all three of them attend a glittering charity ball in London together…
From the Booker Prize-nominated author of The Life and Loves of a She-Devil, this “piquant social comedy” (New York Daily News) is a tale of passion, spite, romance, and revenge, set in the world of the rich, the stylish, the famous—and the infamous.
“Playful, sharp, and funny.”—Los Angeles Times
“Swift and amusing.”—The New York Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Originally commissioned by Bulgari, the Italian jewelry company, as a novel to be circulated privately to clients, Weldon's latest breaks new (and deeply controversial) ground in its cross-fertilization of art and marketing. Condemn Weldon as they may, it will be hard for reviewers to entirely dismiss the wickedly entertaining fiction that results. Covering familiar territory, the prolific, irreverent writer (Rhode Island Blues; The Life and Loves of a She-Devil; etc.) crafts a deliciously witty and compulsively readable romp through the hearts (and beds) of four intelligent, flawed characters who want what they want and get what they deserve. Grace Salt (n e McNab), the wronged middle-aged ex-wife of millionaire developer Barley Salt, still suffers pangs of longing for him despite his recent marriage to Doris Dubois, the ambitious, youthful host of a TV arts program. "If I did not hate her I expect I would quite like her," Grace muses of course, she's just been released from prison for attempting to run Doris down in a parking lot. The three inadvertently meet at a charity event hosted by Lady Juliet Random, in which a portrait of the socialite wearing a custom-made Bulgari necklace, painted by the young and handsome Walter Wells, is up for auction. Grace, the highest bidder, walks away with the portrait and the painter's heart; Walter's romanticization of Grace as a "blown rose" transmutes quickly into as true a love as Weldon may believe in. The acquisitive and increasingly malicious Doris leaves with her heart set on snagging the necklace and gaining revenge for losing the painting. Weldon's prose is both wonderfully expressive and economical throughout, and her slightly disappointing ending will easily be forgiven.