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written. I don't even know what color the cover was since I listened to it on tape. It's a novel about a British banking family during the Victorian era. The two boys attended school with a wealth Latin American war lord's son who insinuated himself into the family after an accident (or not) happened at the school. The poor cousin eventually became a powerful member of the family and the heir became a no good wastrel. The mother was a manipulator who got the family involved in politics and used various ruthless tactics to eliminate the competition. She always started one one her conquests by taking someone on a tour of the house to see all the redecorating she had done. Ring any bells? I know I deserve a lot of verbal abuse for not having any more info than I do and I'll accept it humbly if anyone can tell me the name of this book and/or the author.

2006-06-22 11:27:14 · 4 answers · asked by Lleh 6 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

4 answers

It sounds like " A Dangerous Fortune" by Ken Follet.
(It may or may not have the Article "a" in the title.)

2006-06-22 12:26:07 · answer #1 · answered by sistersofmercy123 3 · 4 0

"A Dangerous Fortune" by Ken Follett

Kirkus Reviews Follett (Night Over Water, 1991; The Pillars of The Earth, 1989, etc.) peeks into the naughty world of late Victorian merchant bankers. A tragic misadventure among schoolboys is at the root of the rotten world of the Pilaster family. Weak bully Edward Pilaster and his too-dear South American chum Mickey Miranda cause the death by drowning of a lad from the lower form at their minor public school and then grow up to become as corrupt as one might expect. Mickey murders his way to a sinecure in the London legation of his nitrate-rich Latin American homeland, and, with much help from his gorgeous, manipulative mum Augusta, Edward bumbles his way to a partnership in the immensely important family bank. The only really good Pilaster, aside from discreetly gay Uncle Samuel, is young Hugh, whose father left the family firm, founded his own bank, and then had to commit suicide when the bank foundered. Hugh is a born banker, but since he's so much smarter than cousin Edward, Aunt Augusta hates him and throws constant obstacles in his path. Against Hugh's advice, Mickey and Edward team up on a series of huge loans to Mickey's government--money that goes to the purchase of war materiel and the advancement of Mickey's thuggish father. On this rotten foundation, the Pilaster bank grows to Imperial preeminence and Augusta gets the earldom she wants for the husband she dislikes. Hugh, pining for the Polish-born, Jewish bareback- rider he loved and lost and still nursing his childhood memory of That Day At The Swimming Hole, gets nothing but grief until those shaky South American bonds finally collapse and he's really needed. Interesting financial tips and a sprinkling of naughty bits, but the rest is minor Masterpiece Theatre. (BOM )
(Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 1993)

2006-06-22 14:55:53 · answer #2 · answered by mingjoslyn 3 · 0 0

I think I remember a Syndney Sheldon book that had a plot line like you describe. Unfortunately, the name of the book escapes me.

2006-06-22 20:52:15 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, but the mother sounds like an ex mother in law.

2006-06-22 11:31:07 · answer #4 · answered by shehawke 5 · 0 0

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