Paris Hilton shares throwback photos from her childhood as she promotes new memoir. Jurassic Park star Sam Neill, 75, reveals he's being treated for stage-three blood cancer in new book: 'I'm crook, possibly dying' but leave fans questioning how she can moveįans of 90s girlband B*Witched ecstatic as group performs on Comic Relief, leaving viewers stunned over youthful looks 'How did she get into that dress?': AJ Odudu opts for a red latex midi while hosting Comic Relief. Stars get boozy at Cheltenham! Nick Knowles, 60, celebrates win with girlfriend Katie Dadzie, 32, as he sips on a tipple alongside Idris Elba at festival Liam Payne shocks fans with his VERY chiseled jaw and drastically different appearance after lamenting his 'bloated' features Kim Kardashian Takes London: Star is treated like royalty as she checks out her SKIMS collection in Selfridges after stopping off at the London Eye Keanu Reeves leads tributes to Lance Reddick: John Wick star says he's 'heartbroken' while The Wire's Wendell Pierce also shares heartfelt note Red Nose Day telethon raises £31.9m as fans hail Traitors sketch 'the best part of the night' after host Paddy McGuinness makes a VERY cheeky dig If these all sound too heavy-going, The Enchanted April by Elizabeth Von Arnim is a joyous novel about a group of women holidaying together on the Italian Riviera.Īll these make for rewarding female company. They have been raised to believe that contact with the outside world, especially men, will be toxic to them. Grace, Lia and Sky are three sisters, brought up in isolation on an island. Sophie Mackintosh's uncanny The Water Cure is a dystopian feminist fable. In time, Marie will build up the abbey and its wealth into a mighty female fortress protected by a maze. Its leader is Marie de France, who arrives as a gangly French teenager, aggrieved at having been exiled from the court of Eleanor of Aquitaine, with whom she has a weird psycho-sexual obsession. Matrix by Lauren Groff is set in a medieval English abbey. In fiction, female-only spaces are often depicted as a bulwark against male violence. But they are also terrified about their afterlife: the elders have told them that salvation is dependent on their forgiving the men. In fiction, female-only spaces are often depicted as a bulwark against male violenceĮight women meet in a hayloft to debate their best course of action: should they stay and forgive stay and fight for justice, or flee? The traumatised illiterate women are fearful of what life will be if they leave.
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