Book description
Stella works as an agony aunt for a teenage magazine. She lives on
Pansy Island, a self-consciously arty community on the Thames, where her
husband Adrian writes erotic novels in a summerhouse by the river, while
her two teenage children prepare themselves for adult life in various
ways not necessarily recommended in the pages of their mother's advice
columns. Stella's friends assume that she has no problems of her own,
and shamelessly come to her for the advice she dishes up for a living on
the magazine; Stella, however, finds herself with a problem she cannot
handle when Abigail, her rich and glamorous friend from university,
comes to stay. Abigail has been deserted by her husband, and has decided
that Stella's life, and more particularly Stella's husband (with whom
she once had a fling in their younger days) will fill the gap nicely.
Judy Astley was frequently told off for day-dreaming at her drearily
traditional school but has found it to be the ideal training for
becoming a writer. There were several false-starts to her career:
secretary at an all-male Oxford college (sacked for undisclosable
reasons), at an airline (decided, after a crash and a hijacking, that
she was safer elsewhere) and as a dress designer (quit before anyone
noticed she was adapting Vogue patterns). She spent some years as a
parent and as a painter before sensing that the day was approaching when
she'd have to go out and get a Proper Job. With a nagging certainty that
she was temperamentally unemployable, and desperate to avoid office
coffee, having to wear tights every day and missing out on sunny days on
Cornish beaches with her daughters, she wrote her first novel, Just for
the Summer. She has now had eleven novels published by Black Swan.