Product Details
Instances of the Number 3

Instances of the Number 3
By Salley Vickers

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Product Description

The fantastic new edition of the bestselling second novel from the author of 'Miss Garnet's Angel'. Bridget Hansome and Frances Slater have only one thing in common. And that's Peter Hansome, who has died suddenly. Without their husband or lover, the women find that before they can rebuild their lives they must look to themselves and unravel mysteries that they had never before even suspected. So begins an unlikely alliance between wife and mistress and a voyage of discovery that is as comic as it is profound. 'Instances of the Number 3' is a funny, beguiling exploration of love, bereavement, Shakespeare, illusion and the impossibility of escaping your past. Following on from 'Miss Garnet's Angel', this brilliant novel confirms Salley Vickers as a writer who transcends generations.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #127185 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-05-06
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Salley Vickers' novel Instances of the Number Three is set in London and Shropshire. It describes the relationship between a dead man, his wife and his mistresses and is illuminated by philosophical ponderings on Hamlet and his ghost, and the poetry of Dante, Gerald Manley Hopkins and John Donne. Peter Hansome is the dead husband who walks through the pages of the novel, appearing to his wife Bridget in "his old tweed jacket and cords. He was, in fact, exactly, but without the disfiguring cuts and bruises of the accident, as she had seen him last--in his coffin. "To come to terms with his life and death, literature-loving Bridget makes friends with his mistress, Francis, an ex-artists' model: "She ... had a capacity for stillness and the kind of body which reflects planes of light." But as the omniscient narrator says:

This is not an account of feminine jealousy, or even revenge, instead its a story of negotiation and discovery as the characters orbit each other like little planets.
Vickers' prose style is witty, literary and decorous, her musing on the instances of the number three take in purgatory, heaven and hell; the eternal lovers triangle and the trinity (memorably described as the "different flavours of a Neapolitan ice"). The book is a controlled meditation on personal identity, passion and art, where emotions are analysed and reconciled. Sally Vickers' trick is to keep you interested in the hearts and lives of the characters as her novel of ideas gently unfurls.

This is a fine successor to Vickers' hugely successful debut novel, Miss Garnett's Angel, a subtle story of an older woman's emotional epiphany set in contemporary Venice. --Eithne Farry

Review
'Salley Vickers is a remarkable optimist. She shows that happiness can be found even after it seems to have died.' David Sexton, Evening Standard 'Gentleness of perception and sharpness of intellect!sustains you long after the last page.' Bel Mooney, The Times 'Admirable. Salley Vickers has a way with persuasive characters and crisp narrative.' Penelope Lively, Independent 'Vickers writes sympathetically about the bereaved women as they remake their lives.' Margaret Walter, Sunday Times 'Studded with observations and asides that stop you in your tracks.' Julie Wheelwright, Scotland on Sunday 'The reader glides through it effortlessly. The plot is simple, yet has an amazing amount of narrative power. Vickers' second novel confirms that she will have a long and outstanding career.' Martyn Goff, The Times 'Lovely. Distinctive grace.' Murrough O'Brien, Daily Telegraph 'Her voice rings true and strong.' Jane Gardam, Spectator

The Guardian, Julie Myerson, 18th August 2001
'Vicker's novel is gallopingly readable and its two principal women are compellingly drawn'.


Customer Reviews

Wise, Witty and Discerning5
I'm in sympathy with the customer who got clobbered taking his wife to Venice after reading Salley Vickers's brilliant, and seminal, 'Miss Garnet's Angel'. I, too, was caught by the 'haunted angel' quality of her observation and prose and my partner and I spent a blissful and informative few days in Venice following in the footsteps of Miss Garnet and her Archangel.

I picked this one up with some trepidation, but if anything I like it better than the first. Salley Vickers is very good on men, and male psychology. Unlike many female authors, she appears to like and understand men, while at the same time illustrating that she perceives their many foibles and weaknesses, though always with sympathy and wit. Peter, the dead husband, is especially well observed. And I like her matter-of-fact tone with the 'supernatural'. It makes you believe another level of reality is with us all the time(which I guess is her aim?)

By the way, does anyone know what she looks like? She seems to fight shy of photographs on her books, and her excellent website is also very sparing of any autobigraphical detail (she's clearly not a vain author) but an image of an ironically smiling keen-eyed apparition, rather like Athene, or one of those other clever Greek goddesses, is beginning to haunt my imagination.

Another superb book from Salley Vickers5
Salley Vickers has produced another superb book. The characterisations are subtle and indirect, with a natural complexity and untidiness. Although the book addresses Hamlet the tone is more that of a mild Elizabethan commedy. Like a good meander it contains many hidden corners and references for the perceptive reader. Not as genteel as it may seem from a casual perusal!

An imagination that enthrals4
I promised to take my wife to Venice ten years ago but Spain got in the way. Sally Vickers's Miss Garnet Angel however made me pay out many Euros on an immediate Venice visit that was as equisite as her book. This prompted me to try 'Instances of Number Three and I was not dissapointed in in the least. The author has a knack of audacious surprise that made one think.
A very clever and fascinating read.