Book description
As heard on 'Book at Bedtime', BBC Radio 4
The gaudy years of the Restoration are long gone. Robert Merivel,
physician and courtier to Charles II, loved for his gift to turn
sorrow into laughter, now faces the agitations and anxieties of middle
age. Questions crowd his mind: has he been a good father? Is he a fair
master? Is he the King's friend or the King's slave?
In search of answers, Merivel sets off for the French court. But
Versailles - all glitter in front and squalor behind - leaves Merivel
in despair, until a chance encounter with Madame de Flamanville, a
seductive Swiss botanist, allows him to dream of an honourable future.
But will that future ever be his? Back home at Bidnold Manor, his
loyalty and medical skill are tested to their limits, while the
captive bear he has brought back from France begins to cause
unlooked-for havoc in his heart and on his estate.
With a cascade of lace at his neck and a laugh that can burst out of
him in the midst of torment, Merivel is a uniquely brilliant creation,
soulful, funny, outrageous and achingly sad. He is Everyman. His
unmistakable, self-mocking voice speaks directly to us down the centuries.
Rose Tremain's bestselling novels have won many awards, including the
Orange Prize (
The Road Home
), the Whitbread Novel of the Year (
Music and
Silence
), the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Prix Femina Etranger
(
Sacred Country
).
Restoration
, the first of her novels to feature Robert Merivel, was shortlisted for
the Booker Prize in1989 and made into a film in 1995. Her short story,
'Moth', was also filmed (as the award-winning
Ricky
) by François Ozon in 2009. Her most recent novel,
Trespass
, was a Richard and Judy Bookclub Choice. Rose Tremain was made a CBE in
2007. She lives in Norfolk and London with the biographer, Richard
Holmes.