247onlineshopping.co.uk
 Location:  Home» Books » Paperback Deals » Wild Designs  
Categories
Electronics
Music
DVD
Software
Toys
Video Games
Personal Care
Home/Garden
Kitchen
Outdoor Living
Books
Harry Potter
Sports & Leisure
Jewellery & Watches
Music
Baby Store
Outdoor Living
Business Books
Xmas Store
Halo 3
Halo 3 (Xbox 360)

 
2GB SD Card
Kingston Technology 2GB SD Secure Digital Card

 
Braun Oral-B EB17-8 Refill Pack
Braun Oral-B EB17-8 Refill Pack

 

Wild Designs

Wild Designs

enlarge enlarge 
Author: Katie Fforde
Publisher: Arrow Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £7.98 (100%)



New (5) Used (16) from £0.01

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 6648

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Pages: 416
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0099446677
EAN: 9780099446675
ASIN: 0099446677

Publication Date: June 5, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Wild Designs
  • Unknown Binding - Wild Designs
  • Hardcover - Wild Designs
  • Hardcover - Wild Designs
  • Hardcover - Wild Designs
  • Hardcover - Wild Designs
  • Audio Cassette - Wild Designs
  • Paperback - Wild Designs: A Novel by the Author of Stately Pursuits

Similar Items:

  • The Rose Revived
  • Living Dangerously
  • Life Skills
  • Stately Pursuits
  • Artistic Licence

Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars 1 of Ffordes Best - and it's not about 20-somethings!   September 2, 2003
56 out of 58 found this review helpful

Somehow Katie Fforde can take characters that in another's hands would be unrealistic and makes them believable and down-to-earth. Fforde always turns a good tale, but I found this especially wonderful - maybe it's because the herione is pushing 40 with kids. (I've pushed 40 over!) And she still gets a fabulous romance! Another thing I love about Fforde is that the books are more about women finding themselves and their own place in the world than they are about finding love. (But they always get that, too - OK, maybe these are fairytales, but they at least seem realistic!) Althea is especially heartwarming, dealing with an insufferable ex, losing her job, kids that are good but demanding and self-centered (like all kids). Along comes Patrick to disrupt her life - the most disruptive threat being the fact that he's bought the property with the greenhouse that she's been using without permission. Soon, he threatens her peace of mind, his girlfriend runs off with her ex, she has to find a way to support herself - well, it all works out. The supporting characters are wonderful (as always) and I loved the description of all that goes into the Chelsea flower show. In my opinion, there's not a clunker in Fforde's collection.


5 out of 5 stars A happy book about good people doing positive things.   December 7, 2001
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

Katie Fforde is one of my favourite authors and this book fulfils all my expectations from reading the other novels. I guess I enjoy her writing because although her main characters have usually had to cope with difficult times they are usually good people doing positive things with their lives, who look out for others. Unlike so many modern novels which leave you unfulfilled or even depressed, Katie Fforde's do the opposite. They leave you hopeful that there are some good people left in the world and enthused to get on with whatever life may have thrown at you. In "Wild Designs" she identifies so well with the battles of a mother of teenagers and yet you feel her kids are good kids. As a gardener her descriptions of real life gardening on a budgetr are so true and her wry humour about food, (spaghetti again?!) and fashion are wonderful, but she still gets her man!! Highly to be recommended.


5 out of 5 stars I think this is my favorite Katie Fforde book   March 16, 2001
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

And that's saying alot. Somehow Katie Fforde can take characters that in another's hands would be unrealistic and makes them believable and down-to-earth. Fforde always turns a good tale, but I found this especially wonderful - maybe it's because the herione is pushing 40 with kids. (I've pushed 40 over!) And she still gets a fabulous romance! Another thing I love about Fforde is that the books are more about women finding themselves and their own place in the world than they are about finding love. (But they always get that, too - OK, maybe these are fairytales, but they at least seem realistic!) Althea is especially heartwarming, dealing with an insufferable ex, losing her job, kids that are good but demanding and self-centered (like all kids). Along comes Patrick to disrupt her life - the most disruptive threat being the fact that he's bought the property with the greenhouse that she's been using without permission. Soon, he threatens her peace of mind, his girlfriend runs off with her ex, she has to find a way to support herself - well, it all works out. The supporting characters are wonderful (as always) and I loved the description of all that goes into the Chelsea flower show. In my opinion, there's not a clunker in Fforde's collection.


5 out of 5 stars This book relates to the everyday working woman.   March 24, 2000
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I recently listened to this book on audio tape. I really liked the humor and the real life struggles of the main character. She is someone working women can relate to, her moods and emotions dealing with her family, situations that happen are all things that the everyday person can relate to. Just when you think you know what will happen the book surprises you.


4 out of 5 stars It Made Me Feel Good   October 9, 2007
Elina H. (Finland)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is a terrific survival-story for all middle-aged, somewhat overweight women with the nicest but a bit overwhelming teenaged children and a withered belief in themselves as sexual beings. Katie Fforde's Althea is divorced from a gorgeous, totally selfish husband and seems to be surrounded by most effective, sexually assertive and physically fit younger women. You can't say she has much control over her life; actually, she seems to have given over the role as a subject in her own life to her children.

A martyr Althea is not. She doesn't pity herself. Some of the younger generation may think she is tiresome with her troubles concerning her would-be-affair with Patrick, first sending him packing and then wishing him back, trying not to have an affair with him, on account of her children and what they might feel. Thus is life for us middle-aged women, brought up with guilt and therefore always finding reasons to feel guilty. Althea had not grown up reading Cosmopolitan and learning that you are supposed to have sex for the fun of it. It is very easy to put oneself in Althea's shoes, wanting Patrick and feeling one shouldn't. It is also very refreshing to find a heroine who is thirty-nine and overweight (luscious, thinks Patrick who would like to feel something more yielding than the iron abs and thighs of the gym-going fitness angels...) and who feels conscious about her body marked by childbirth. I am so grateful to K. Fforde for allowing Althea to have her morsel of a Patrick.

There is something very admirable about Althea: she is not bitter to her ex-husband even if he seems not to have an idea that he could feel some responsibility; she is tolerant concerning her effective and critical younger sister and mother; she loves her children unconditionally and allows them to be who they are. To Althea the children are persons in themselves, they are not extensions of herself, and they represent only themselves and not her. On the other hand, the children are thoroughly loyal to her. During the book she finds a way to live her life as a subject person - she notices that firstly, she has a right to her own life, and secondly, the people around her are not going to deny her this right but are happy for her. The only person actually against her happiness is Althea herself, with her guilty expectations concerning herself as a mother.

Althea is surrounded by an interesting gallery of persons. Anybody would want Patrick. He is humorous and strong and somewhat stubborn, and he is a man. Frederick the ex is irritating and funny. We are happy to have him coupled with the self-centered Topaz. The sex-goddess nursery nurse Sylvia and the young and attractive PE-teacher Jenny are seen through Altheas tolerant eyes. There are many redeeming qualities in the control-freakish younger sister Juno, and I find the description of her relationship to Althea masterly, and the mother of the sisters is deliciously horrible. Althea's children are beautifully drawn, I especially liked the Buddhist William, with his sense of humour and his sensitivity to his mother's moods. Teen-aged kids are able to be very nice.

The plot of this book was right, I liked the understated humour, and even if I am not a gardener, the gardening descriptions for me illustrated Althea's enthusiasm and her person. This book made me feel good.


 

© 2005-2008 247OnlineShopping.co.uk . All rights reserved. In association with Amazon.co.uk . Help | Delivery Rates | Resources