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{{newreview
|author=Hannah Rothschild
|title=The Improbability of Love
|rating=4
|genre=General Fiction
|summary=It's set to be the sale of the century: Russian oligarchs, Arab sheikhs, rappers and heiresses are all lined up to bid for ''The Improbability of Love'', a small Antoine Watteau oil painting depicting a courting couple overlooked by a clown. The painting was missing until six months ago, when Annie McDee bought it from a junk shop for £75 as a birthday present for an incompatible fellow she met through Internet dating. When he didn't show for dinner and the junk shop mysteriously burnt down so that she couldn't ask for a refund, the painting became hers. Thirty-year-old Annie had been in a rut: after a painful break-up from Desmond, with whom she ran a cheese shop and café in Devon, she moved to London and was working as a PA to randy Italian film director Carlo Spinetti. She also acquired an unwanted roommate: her alcoholic mother, Evie.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408862476</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Philip Dent
Go on. Run along
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857077961</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Ruth Scurr
|title= John Aubrey: My Own Life
|rating= 4.5
|genre= Biography
|summary=John Aubrey, the seventeenth-century antiquary, writer and archaeologist, occupies a peculiar, even unique place in English literature. When he died, the work for which he is most famous, 'Brief Lives', was a disorganised collection of manuscripts which remained unpublished for over a century. Only in the last hundred years or so has be become more widely recognised as an interesting character and perceptive commentator on society, scholarship and on his contemporaries during the post-restoration era.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099490633</amazonuk>
}}

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