
Death of a She Devil by Fay Weldon
Sequel to The Life and Loves of a She Devil. Tyler is a new kind of 'heroine'. He's an ultra-confident, twenty-something man. But he won't be satisfied with his life until he can transition into the ultimate symbol of power and status: a woman...
Elegantly written, sharply perceptive and fantastically good fun * Daily Mail *
She's a queen of wordsA tribal elder -- Caitlin Moran
Funny, waspish and acute... A fierce retrospective on the achievements of the women's movement - and its cost - and a defiant hurrah for grumpy old women' * The Times *
One of our very best writers * The Sunday Times *
A brilliant black comedy * Mail on Sunday Event magazine *
Fay has been incredibly vocal about transgender issues, and her new book features her trademark black humour - and some shocking twists * Closer *
A bawdy controversial read * Woman & Home *
It's good to have Fay Weldon back, poking the hornet's nest of modern feminism with her sly eye * Daily Express *
Weldon's amused defiance is irresistible * Mail on Sunday. *
Scalpel-sharp and laceratingly funny * Good Housekeeping. *
A delight to read. Each chapter has a hilarious heading, revealing Weldon's affinity with the pre-Romantic tradition of Sterne and Swift * Irish Times *
Fay Weldon's new novel is certain to be a bestseller * Catholic Herald *
I suspect Weldon couldn't care less about political correctness... for her, it's all literary mischief' * i newspaper *
A kind of coda to a brilliant literary career... The satire is neat and very funny... A politically incorrect novel that is at the same time deliberately indecorous in a way that will make anyone feel like a prude if they object to a comedy as swaggering in its confidence and as subtle in its observation as this... Obviously the work of a genius' * Sydney Morning Herald *
She's a queen of wordsA tribal elder -- Caitlin Moran
Funny, waspish and acute... A fierce retrospective on the achievements of the women's movement - and its cost - and a defiant hurrah for grumpy old women' * The Times *
One of our very best writers * The Sunday Times *
A brilliant black comedy * Mail on Sunday Event magazine *
Fay has been incredibly vocal about transgender issues, and her new book features her trademark black humour - and some shocking twists * Closer *
A bawdy controversial read * Woman & Home *
It's good to have Fay Weldon back, poking the hornet's nest of modern feminism with her sly eye * Daily Express *
Weldon's amused defiance is irresistible * Mail on Sunday. *
Scalpel-sharp and laceratingly funny * Good Housekeeping. *
A delight to read. Each chapter has a hilarious heading, revealing Weldon's affinity with the pre-Romantic tradition of Sterne and Swift * Irish Times *
Fay Weldon's new novel is certain to be a bestseller * Catholic Herald *
I suspect Weldon couldn't care less about political correctness... for her, it's all literary mischief' * i newspaper *
A kind of coda to a brilliant literary career... The satire is neat and very funny... A politically incorrect novel that is at the same time deliberately indecorous in a way that will make anyone feel like a prude if they object to a comedy as swaggering in its confidence and as subtle in its observation as this... Obviously the work of a genius' * Sydney Morning Herald *
Fay Weldon is now recognized as one of our most important and distinctive literary voices. She published her first novel, A Fat Woman's Joke, in 1967, and has gone on to write over thirty works. In 2001, she received a CBE for services to literature.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781784979591 |
| ISBN 10 | 1784979597 |
| Title | Death of a She Devil |
| Author | Fay Weldon |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing PLC |
| Year published | 2017-04-06 |
| Number of pages | 352 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |