Belfast Telegraph

Escapist novel featuring true romance, a mother’s wrath and a run-down mansion

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Ally Bunbury’s debut novel, The Inheritanc­e, was a hit with its themes of love, jealousy and intrigue set in a world of old money and a more brash jet-set drawing favourable comparison­s with Jilly Cooper’s writing.

Infidelity, Bunbury’s (below) second novel, is littered with a host of lovable (and not so lovable) eccentric characters and picks up some of the same themes.

At the age of 27, Elodie Gold leads a life of luxury.

With her own flat in her mother’s fabulous house in London and a hefty allowance, she is free to spend her days shopping. But a chance encounter leads her to reassess her aimless life.

She ditches her rich, controllin­g boyfriend and, having made a mess of every job, she begins to help out in her friend’s cafe, where she meets the handsome Luke Hamilton.

However, fate intervenes before romance can even blossom.

When her younger brother, Max, returns from LA, things get complicate­d. Her self-obsessed mother, Julia, cuts off Elodie’s allowance following a row, leaving her penniless. Max announces he has a baby daughter, Fleur, who comes complete with a very exacting nanny, paid for by wealthy friends. To escape Julia’s wrath, they all decamp to Bellamore, their grandfathe­r’s sprawling mansion in Ireland where they spent every summer until the year their father died.

After that, Julia cut off all communicat­ion with her father.

Gramps has acquired a busty Dutch girlfriend, who is not too pleased at the invasion, and Aunt Tess, who lives in the gate lodge, is also hostile.

The beautiful house they remember is now dilapidate­d, leaking and damp with Gramps having to sell off most of the heirlooms to pay for the upkeep.

Baby Fleur has a softening effect on everyone, especially Tess, while both Elodie and Max begin to realise how much their allowances kept them dependent on their mother and unable to make their way in the world.

But a web of secrecy surrounds the family history — much of it based on infidelity.

Ally, who is married to historian Turtle Bunbury, grew up in a similar old mansion to the one in the story.

She also worked in the glamorous world of PR, so she draws from experience writing this funny, escapist novel full of quirky twists and turns that leaves you wanting more.

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Infidelity By Ally Bunbury, Poolbeg, £11.99 Review by Ann Dunne
FICTION Infidelity By Ally Bunbury, Poolbeg, £11.99 Review by Ann Dunne

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