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The sequel to AN ACT OF TREACHERY From bestselling author Ann
Widdecombe, a moving tale of families broken apart by war, and one
boy's quest to come to terms with his history. Klaus-Pierre is the
love-child of a young Frenchwoman and a senior, married German
officer. Klaus-Pierre never knew his father, who was killed before
he was born, and his mother was rejected by her family of patriots
and resistance workers. Cared for by his German family,
Klaus-Pierre is loved and happy - but as he grows up in a Europe
where old enemies are learning to cooperate, he tries to make his
own 'Act of Peace' with his French relatives. The result is a
horrifying confrontation between the two families when they meet
accidentally in Provence. Meanwhile, Klaus-Pierre is struggling
with another quest to come to terms with his roots, as he tries to
find out just what kind of man his father really was... 'Impressive
. . . Widdecombe skilfully and often movingly uses the boy's
struggle with his own painful history to throw light on the
troubled years between 1945 and the fall ofthe BErlin Wall in 1989'
SUNDAY TIMES
Forthright memoirs of a singular personality - former MP and
Strictly Come Dancing star, Ann Widdecombe. In this life story of
one of our most outspoken and celebrated politicians, Ann
Widdecombe offers a unique insight into her time as a minister in
three government departments and the Shadow Cabinet in the 1990s,
as well as taking us back to her wandering childhood and explaining
the roots of her deeply held views. A rare anti-hunting Tory, who
campaigned for prison education and once donned a miner's overalls
to go down a coal mine, Ann Widdecombe has never shied away from
controversy. Her memoirs reveal a singular personality who lives
life to the full. From feisty appearances on Have I Got News for
You to her unforgettable and star-turning performances on Strictly
Come Dancing, Ann has earned her place in the public's affections
and has been heralded as a 'national living treasure' by the
Guardian.
'A tale of illicit love, hate and loss in occupied France . . .
confirming [Ann Widdecombe] as an eloquent storyteller' GLASGOW
HERALD Catherine Dessin, a young French girl living in Paris during
the occupation, falls for an older, married German officer. The
novel examines the tensions this causes within her family of
patriots and resistance workers. Meanwhile Klaus, the German
officer, who is Oxford educated and a professed Anglophile, faces
his own moral dilemma as he comes to realise, through his love for
Catherine and a tragedy in his own family, the true nature of the
regime he is serving. 'A gripping read' SUNDAY EXPRESS 'Widdecombe
is to be applauded for the range of her ambition within this book:
the admirably large cast of characters is well-handled, their
dilemmas are believable and the narrative makes for compulsive
reading' THE TIMES
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Someday (Paperback)
Corinna Turner; Introduction by Ann Widdecombe
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R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Ann Widdecombe's controversial novel about the position of men in
today's society. Jason Kirk is a 32-year-old teacher who believes
he is happily married until he returns home one day to find that
his wife has left him, taking their two young children with her.
Suddenly Jason finds the role of father denied to him as he is
separated from his children and reduced to the role of visitor. The
law is weighted against him and his wife produces a series of
excuses to withhold contact with Jake, eight, and Leah, three.
Jason, who had wanted to bring his children up to maturity on a
daily basis, not only has to face the pain of this loss but endures
the misery of persecution by the Child Support Agency. He discovers
he is not alone and that among his friends and colleagues, there
are others enduring the same situation. FATHER FIGURE is an
enthralling, thought-provoking novel of modern fatherhood.
'You want to go on reading, you want to know what happens; it isn't
easy to put down' Ruth Rendell A powerful novel about a family, and
how their lives are torn apart in a single, devastating moment.
Mark and Claire seem an ideal couple. He is an accountant, she the
daughter of a successful businessman. They live in a comfortable
middle-class village in Surrey. Then, during a party for their
daughter Pippa's baptism, their son Jeremy is knocked down on the
road outside. It is their worst nightmare, something they thought
could never happen, and the consequences will affect each one of
them more than they could possibly imagine. What is Claire's guilty
secret, and can her wealthy, self-made father help? Will Mark,
desperate to escape, have the nerve to leave? And how will Pippa be
affected by the turmoil that began on the day of her own
christening? 'A compelling story about the way a family copes with
a catastrophe' THE TIMES 'A delight, a very polished read' CATHOLIC
HERALD 'An accomplished first novel' TATLER 'Humane, thoughtful'
HARPERS AND QUEENS
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