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The Edge of Eden by Helen Benedict
The Edge of Eden by Helen Benedict








The Edge of Eden by Helen Benedict

An armchair traveler's delight, Benedict's novel is an amusingly poignant look at the British abroad in the spirit of Evelyn Waugh. She consults local witchdoctor Monsieur Adonis, while Joelle turns to Madame H l ne, a fortuneteller, and their combined magical efforts culminate in near tragedy and certain loss. As the children run feral, Penelope asks Marguerite to show her grigri, Seychelles magic. Weak, malleable Rupert is soon seduced by the cunning Creole Joelle Lagrenade, but Penelope won't give up her husband without a fight. She soon realizes that the Seychelles are a "dumping ground for incipient failures" and their wives, who turn to alcohol and adultery for entertainment. The Edge of Eden By Helen Benedict - Published 2009 Genres: Saga The Edge of Eden is rich in contrasts: the Seychelles Islands and fog-shrouded London well-to-do British colonists and the poverty of natives religious. Trying to adjust to life on the island chain, Penelope turns to Marguerite, the family's kind and trustworthy local servant, for help with daughters Zara and Chloe. In 1960, Rupert Weston accepts a post in the remote British colony without consulting his wife, Penelope, and his decision isn't well received. Benedict (The Lonely Soldier) chronicles a year in the life of a foolish but surprisingly sympathetic British family that relocates to the equatorial paradise of the Seychelles, located between India and Africa. Helen Benedict Archives - Historical Novel Society Helen Benedict The Edge of Eden By Helen Benedict - Published 2009 Genres: Saga The Edge of Eden is rich in contrasts: the Seychelles Islands and fog-shrouded London well-to-do British colonists and the poverty of natives religious.










The Edge of Eden by Helen Benedict