No Angel by Penny Vincenzi, , 0752843109 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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No Angel, cheap new, used books  No Angel (Spoils of Time Trilogy)
Author: Penny Vincenzi  
ISBN: 0752843109   /   Paperback
Publisher: Orion   /   2001-05-14
List Price: £6.99
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Editorial Reviews:
Penny Vincenzi's No Angel is probably her most accomplished novel yet, and draws on many elements of the author's own life in journalism and publishing. Since inaugurating her writing career with Old Sins, Vincenzi has developed into one of the most stylish and compelling writers of blockbusting fiction with such novels as Another Woman, Forbidden Places, and Almost a Crime achieving phenomenal sales and a devoted readership that follows her work very closely.

Set in Lyttons, a great publishing house, this saga takes us into the lives of the family who owns it, and the dramas of crossed loyalties, ambition and deception inform a narrative that carries the reader along with great gusto. Vincenzi's canvas at the start of the book is the Edwardian era known as the Belle Époque, a time in which society contrasted hedonistic luxury and great social deprivation, with the First World War waiting in the wings to sweep so much away.

Celia Lytton is the firm-minded and ambitious wife of Oliver Lytton, the head of the publishing house that bears his name. Sylvia Miller, coming from a background of crushing poverty, is threatened by Celia's intrusion into her life, when Sylvia's youngest daughter is taken from the family to join the Lyttons and move in a different social circle. Sebastian Brooke, the author of a much-acclaimed children's book, finds himself both professionally and personally involved with the ambitious Celia.

This is the first volume in a series, The Spoils of Time, and Vincenzi sets out her stall impressively. We are very quickly involved in the larger-than-life experiences of these powerfully drawn characters, and as well as telling a thoroughly involving tale, the author is able to deal with some serious questions over good and evil. Most of all, it is her charismatic characters (such as the willful Celia) that make a lasting impression on the reader and the author's ability to keep the reader engrossed:

Celia had been right, Oliver was initially resistant to the risks of making love to her; but a mixture of emotional blackmail and a determined onslaught on his senses worked quite quickly. They found a physical delight in each other almost at once; Oliver was not exactly experienced, indeed his own knowledge had been gained at the hands of a couple of chorus girls introduced by his best friend at Oxford, but it was sufficient to guide him through Celia's initiation.
--Barry Forshaw

Customer Reviews:
Truly Unforgettable!     
This opening novel in "The Spoils of Time" trilogy was my first introduction to Penny Vincenzi's work, and I am so grateful I discovered her. Set around the Lyttons publishing house, against the glamorous backdrop of Edwardian London, this is a truly magical tale. The author's witty and distinctive style, not to mention the emotionally charged storylines, will keep you enthralled to the very end.

Celia, the heroine of this series, is a woman who knows what she wants. Moreover, being in possession of a deadly combination of beauty, intelligence and determination, she usually gets it. Follow along with her struggle to overcome her husband Oliver's reluctance to let her work alongside him at Lyttons, her thirst to prove herself, and her resolve to claw her way to the very top of the Lytton Empire. Experience all her triumphs and frustrations, her joys and her heartache. Love her or loathe her, Celia Lytton will remain with you for life.
Terrible!     
Absolute nonsense! My first reading of a Penny Vincenzi book and I think its definitely put me off. Her writing is so dull and amateurish, I refuse to believe that she is considered an acclaimed writer. The characters have no depth, you are led to either like or dislike them, completely one dimensional. I have to admit I gave up on it half way through and even then I felt I'd wasted so much time!!!
Simply first class!!     
This is my first Penny Vincenzi novel and I'm impressed!

No Angel is the first in a trilogy (The Spoils of Time) about the Lytton family, starting in the Edwardian area, the belle époque, covering World War I and going on into the glamourous twenties.

The 724 pages got me hooked from page 1. There are family matters, professional matters (the Lyttons own a renown publishing house in London) and love matters through one of the bleakest times (the war that is, which takes up most of the book) in English history.

I'm amazed by Vincenzi's attention to detail (never boring) and her amazing insight into the human mind of people of all ages and classes. She maintains a very British writing style and still manages to sound both straightforward and open, not the least about the matter of sex. Her writing flows lighty, the somewhat stilted speech of the upper classes melting easily into the author's superb story telling.

The characterization is strong and highly perceptive. I have to particularly mention Lady Beckingham. The mother of the book's main character, Lady Celia Lytton, is a truly refreshing personality. Her sound relationship with Lord Buckingham (with an ever roaming eye for young pretty servants), her view on family life and affairs on the side (of whom she approves as long as they are executed properly!) and no nonsense child upbringing. Unruly young ladies and gentlemen are amazingly reformed after a couple of weeks at the Beckinham residence, Ashingham. A sight for sore eyes it must have been, during the war with its petrol shortage, to see the good Lady roaming the countryside in her beloved motor cycle. Do women come like that any more??

No Angel comes through as a very modern book, surprisingly in tune with the world almost a hundred years after the story took place.

It is (cliché) unpoutdownable, a (cliché) pageturner and I am eagerly awaiting the already ordered two sequels "Into Temptation" and "Something Dangerous".

The best book I have read in ages. Simply first class!!

Amazing!!!!!     
I have read a few of Penny Vincenzi's books and really enjoyed them but No Angel is a cut above the rest. From the first page I was hooked and finished this rather thick book in four days! Thank god this is the first in a trilogy because I can't wait to read more about the next generation of the Lytton family and I have in fact already ordered Something Dangerous and Into Temptation (the next two in this trilogy) and am eagerly awaiting their arrival. Please read this book and I sure you won't be disappointed it is truely wonderful.
Who wants to be an angel?     
Indeed Celia is no angel - but she is a credible woman and hugely likeable despite/because of her compulsions. Before her time she might be, as is her Mother, but Vincenzi is convincing in her portrayal of a woman bursting and determined to escape the confines of the society into which she has been born. The reader can feel Celia's emotion and the torment she feels as a result of her own actions and partly as a reaction to the torture felt by Oliver on his return from war. If it is possible to love two men at the same time Vincenzi makes us feel that Celia can. This is a page-turner which keeps you on the edge and she slides effortlessly from one sub-plot to another and teases with the chapter endings which make you feel a conclusion is coming to a situation - only to find that the final sentence had applied to a different sub-plot. She misleads the reader endlessly, leaves you feeling a resolution, only to change the agenda - and how brilliantly she crafts this. I could almost sense her pleasure in doing this. Her research is magnificent and she transports you easily into Edwardian drawing rooms, tenements of poverty and injustice and the battlefields of suffering and wasted lives. Vincenzi takes your imagination and wrings it inside out. You barely have to make an effort to picture the period; she gives it to you with her vivid prose and ownership of the age. The dual morality of the time becomes a fundamental part of the novel and Celia tries to cross this. Vincenzi seems to me to be a 20th century mix of Henry James and Wilkie Collins with a touch of D.H.Lawrence's working class women thrown in in the character of Sylvia. Her style is different, her plots as complex, her message as clear and her use of language as clever in its description. In this novel she manipulates a woman at the start of the 20th century who wants and believes she can have it all. I felt so much for Celia even though she was no angel. I almost wanted her to have it all and could barely wait to finish it to see if she did - and to pass it on to my Mother who is waiting for it and who has become a big fan of Vincenzi too. I feel sorry for anyone who has not yet discovered this author - and hope they soon do. A novelist par excellence.
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