![]() ![]() Whatever kind of romantic story you’re writing, there’s always the problem that the romance needs complications, but if you go too far, something in the structure of the novel snaps and the complications become just too much to be redeemed through the romance plot. ![]() (For a more detailed description and review of the book, see Trashionista – even if I don’t completely agree with the review.!)īut let us move on to the interview itself. ![]() The tone of this novel is a lot more melancholy than that of A Hopeless Romantic or her first novel Going Home, and I found the surprise twist so poignant and it haunted me for days afterwards. She used to have a promising career and an altogether pleasant life, but then everything fell apart, and we gradually find out what kind of a mess she left behind – and why. ![]() In The Love of Her Life, Kate returns to London from New York, after a long absence, to see her ailing father. I’ve been a big fan of Harriet Evans since I read her delightful second novel, A Hopeless Romantic, and now that she has a new novel out this year, I was keen to ask her a few questions.Įvans writes very perceptively about the lives and loves of young women, warts and all. ![]()
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