Cathy Scarlet and Tom Feather have decided to create the best catering company in Dublin. They have the perfect premises, heaps of talent, and even a few contacts, but not everyone seems as pleased by the idea of ‘Scarlet Feather’ as they are. 
Tom’s parents are disappointed that he has turned his back on the family business. Cathy’s husband buries himself in work, becoming ever more distant, whilst his mother thinks Cathy should stay at home to look after him. And Tom’s relationship with his beautiful, ambitious girlfriend becomes fraught as she struggles to realise her dream of becoming a model.
As Cathy and Tom strive to maintain their emotional ties amidst catering triumphs and disasters they are supported, and undermined, by an enchanting cast of classic Binchy characters.
Read by Kate Binchy
(p) 2000 Orion Publishing Group
			Tom’s parents are disappointed that he has turned his back on the family business. Cathy’s husband buries himself in work, becoming ever more distant, whilst his mother thinks Cathy should stay at home to look after him. And Tom’s relationship with his beautiful, ambitious girlfriend becomes fraught as she struggles to realise her dream of becoming a model.
As Cathy and Tom strive to maintain their emotional ties amidst catering triumphs and disasters they are supported, and undermined, by an enchanting cast of classic Binchy characters.
Read by Kate Binchy
(p) 2000 Orion Publishing Group
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Reviews
			What is Maeve Binchy's magic? Every time she publishes a novel the race is on to the armchair or the poolside seat, telephones fall eerily silent ... Her great gift is to suck her reader into the drama of everyday lives without fuss ... She relies on dialogue and on keeping up a cracking pace		
					
			
			The words "Irish warmth" are repeatedly used in reference to a  Binchy novel and I believe that this keynote of authorial warmth is one of the compelling aspects of her writing ... Binchy is a consummate storyteller who involves the reader in the world she creates ... Binchy is a Dickens: she writes about the dilemmas of human beings with a backdrop which describes the manners and morals of a society ... the Binchy public will not be disappointed at storyline or resolution		
					
			
			SCARLET FEATHER has all the distinguishing Binchy characteristics: human interest, pacy plot, judicious humour, warm sentiment ... You can see why, for a legion of female readers, Maeve Binchy is a one-woman opiate of the people		
					
			
			Drama, humour, warmth and great characters - it's what we expect from Maeve Binchy, one of the world's best-loved writers		
					
			
			Yet again she has created a story of unexpected twists and turns in the lives of wholly believable people with whom you can't help feeling involved		
					
			
			If you're a lover of Maeve Binchy's warm, engrossing novels, you're in for a treat ... [a] tale of love, heartbreak and laugher. You'll be hooked by the characters from the start and the fine storytelling simply sweeps you along		
					
			
			This is Binchy at her finest		
					
			
			Her story-telling talents are never in question ... Scarlet Feather is one of Binchy's best. Reading it is as comforting as curling up by a fire with cocoa, toast and treacle		
					
			
			SCARLET FEATHER has that classic Maeve Binchy component: the readability factor. And if leisure palls for Maeve, it's blindingly apparent there are more novels inside her. The penny candle's still burning		
					
			
			This is a wonderfully warm-hearted book with an endearing cast of characters and the Irish atmosphere that is Maeve Binchy's trademark		
					
			
			Maeve is a storyteller, she has an ear for dialogue and an eye for character and she's employed these gifts to their full potential ... SCARLET FEATHER has that classic Maeve Binchy component: the readability factor		
					
			
			The storytelling is, as always, confident, sharp and funny		
					
			
			Maeve is just like a good fisherwoman: she teases you, reels you in and by the time you try to get away, you are well and truly hooked.  I literally could not put the book down by the time I got to the last quarter		
					
			 
	
	