Mirror Image
Material type:
- 9780552141345
- F/STE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo Fiction | F/STE |
Available
Order online |
CA00020335 | |||
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Colombo | F/STE |
Available
Order online |
CA00020336 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
From Manhattan high-society to warn-torn France, Mirror Image is a compelling story about the mysterious bond between twin sisters.
For twins Olivia and Victoria, their bond was mysterious, marvellous, and often playful - a secret realm only they inhabited. Shy, serious Olivia, born eleven minutes before her sister, had taken over the role of mother in their lush New York estate. Free-spirited Victoria wanted to change the world, and embraced the women's suffrage movement, dreaming of sailing to war-torn Europe.
Then, in the girls' twenty-first year, as the First World War escalates overseas, a fateful choice changes their lives forever . . .
Rs 660/-
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
India Taylor, who has sacrificed a major career to husband and children, starts to rethink her life when she strikes up a friendship (?) with a married tycoon. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
The raven-haired twins in Steel's (The Klone and I) latest romance wend their way through the social dilemmas and crises of conscience that abound in the lives of two motherless heiresses. Flitting around Edith Wharton's New York and its fashionable countryside (the family home, Henderson Manor, is in Croton-on-Hudson), Olivia and Victoria Henderson come of age in high style and predictable prose. Their physical resemblance (even their father is unable to distinguish between them) exaggerates their temperamental differences. The rebel Victoriasmoker, drinker and suffragetterecklessly gives herself to a married womanizer, Tobias Whitticomb. Olivia dutifully keeps her father's houses and acts as the anxious guardian to her "baby" sister. She also befriends nine-year-old Geoff Dawson, whose mother has died on the Titanic. When Henderson père decides to marry the disgraced Victoria to Geoff's father, Charles, Olivia's heart quietly breaks and the plot thickens. The convenience of the sisters' carbon-copy looks allows Victoria to run off to help the Allied cause in France and Olivia secretly to take her sister's place. Although Steel stretches credibility as the marriage heats up (Charles didn't notice that his wife was virginal again?), the reader is too busy being moved by the powerful events to quibble. Steel doesn't flinch from the realities of childbirth and war and reliably produces yet another suspenseful tearjerker. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Set in the early twentieth century, this coming-of-age tale of identical twin girls showcases two of the most popular Steel character types: one of the twins, Victoria, is racy and sexually adventurous, while the other, Olivia, is virginal and demure. Responsible, stolid Olivia spends much of her time rescuing the headstrong Victoria--from being jailed for agitating for women's rights, from a miserably failed love affair with a married man, and, finally, from a loveless marriage. To accomplish the last feat, Olivia (who has a secret crush on her sister's husband) "switches" with Victoria; she actually steps into her sister's marriage and pretends she is Victoria. While Victoria rushes off to Europe to aid in the war effort (World War I, that is), Olivia stays behind tending her sister's family's home fires and quietly falling in love with her sister's husband. A tad more serious than her usual stories, this one doesn't provide the typical happy ending, but readers, particularly Steel's legions of fans, will not be disappointed, and libraries will probably need several copies. --Kathleen HughesKirkus Book Review
With 370 million books in print, Steel's 45th novel arrives even while her last four titles wait like gold bricks in Dell's paperback inventory. Mirror Image tells of Olivia and Victoria Henderson, identical twins born in 1893, such close look-alikes that even their bewildered, widower father can't tell them apart--an unlikelihood one must just accept. Toss out grammar as well; the first paragraph, describing Edward Henderson's home and family, tells us that ""Nestled as they were in Croton-on-Hudson . . . his attorneys came to see him fairly often."" But Steel's golden drone captures readers and laughs at criticism. The story here opens with the twins at age 20, Olivia caring for the house while Victoria flies about, rides horses, smokes boldly, drives cars, and stumps for women's suffrage. Olivia carries herself like the shy young spinster-heiress of Washington Square; Victoria goes out and gets pregnant by married Toby Whitticomb, then has an abortion. Meanwhile, among the guests at the Hendersons' is widower lawyer Charles Dawson, whose wife went down on the Titanic. Olivia feels a deep attachment for him, but Edward Henderson chooses Charles to marry Victoria and save her reputation. Even so, married Victoria still carries the torch for that bastard Toby, while Charles can't forget his first wife. As for Olivia, whom Charles can't tell from Victoria, well, if you can't guess what happens next you haven't been alive for a very long time. Clichƿ follows ever bolder clichƿ as the Steel style grinds out its mellow surprises for the blissfully half-asleep. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.