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The Golden Collar (1969)

par Elizabeth Cadell

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801335,320 (3.77)10
People called them the perfect couple, and by rights handsome architect Henry Eliot should be thrilled to be engaged to Marly Stonor. Lovely and sophisticated, she is the daughter of one of London's wealthiest entrepreneurs, Sir Bertram Stonor. Why is it, then, that Henry feels uneasy and restless, as if he were locked in a golden collar? Henry's real dilemma begins when Sir Bertram sends him to southern Portugal to purchase a piece of property as a wedding gift for his daughter. There Henry's eyes are opened to a beautiful natural world he has never known -- and to a beautiful natural girl, the property owner's niece.… (plus d'informations)
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18/2020. Another Elizabeth Cadell novel set in Portugal, with English migrants behaving as badly as usual. The story features typical variant characters from this author's cast list: the romantic hero/heroine who only wants a quiet life (+ their extended family), the comic working class man made good, the rich selfish old lady, the fixer, and the local people getting on with their own lives. Similar to The Friendly Air but different enough for them to be readable back-to-back. This is mostly a 3 star read for me but the driving incident is a whole half star's worth of laughter (our hero thinks he can drive a woman's car better than she can but soon discovers he's wrong and gives her back the driving seat).

Our hero on a posh party: "He felt that the well-worn comparison to tropical fish might be used again to describe this gathering - colourful, darting, purposeless - but the fish didn't make this deafening noise."

Our heroine's aunt to her do-gooding niece: "What sort of man will wish to marry you? He will also have to marry fourteen children and one hundred and eight cats." ( )
  spiralsheep | Jan 28, 2020 |
one of Elizabeth Cadell's lenitive entertainments which invite little scrutiny and permit no commentary at all except to say that there is no mystery this time, just romance along with some pleasant Portuguese house and garden accessories
ajouté par spiralsheep | modifierKirkus Reviews (Oct 10, 1968)
 
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There was only one car standing in the the courtyard when Henry Eliot drove through the wide, arched entrance, he identified old Mr. Pugh's Rover, its bodywork scarred and dented, its driving seat covered with the pink, crumpled cushions needed to bring Mr. Pugh's legs within reach of the pedals.
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He felt that the well-worn comparison to tropical fish might be used again to describe this gathering - colourful, darting, purposeless - but the fish didn't make this deafening noise.
"What sort of man will wish to marry you? He will also have to marry fourteen children and one hundred and eight cats."
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People called them the perfect couple, and by rights handsome architect Henry Eliot should be thrilled to be engaged to Marly Stonor. Lovely and sophisticated, she is the daughter of one of London's wealthiest entrepreneurs, Sir Bertram Stonor. Why is it, then, that Henry feels uneasy and restless, as if he were locked in a golden collar? Henry's real dilemma begins when Sir Bertram sends him to southern Portugal to purchase a piece of property as a wedding gift for his daughter. There Henry's eyes are opened to a beautiful natural world he has never known -- and to a beautiful natural girl, the property owner's niece.

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