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The Shell Seekers

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A new introduction in which the author recounts how her famous novel came to be highlights this special edition of a novel that chronicles three generations of the Keeling family, from World War II to the present. 25,000 first printing.

Hardcover

First published December 15, 1987

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About the author

Rosamunde Pilcher

257books2,930followers
Rosamunde Scott was born on 22 September 1924 in Lelant, Cornwall, England, UK, daughter of Helen and Charles Scott, a British commander. Just before her birth her father was posted in Burma, her mother remained in England. She attended St. Clare's Polwithen and Howell's School Llandaff before going on to Miss Kerr-Sanders' Secretarial College. She began writing when she was seven and published her first short story when she was 18. From 1943 through 1946, Pilcher served with the Women's Naval Service. On 7 December 1946, she married Graham Hope Pilcher, a war hero and jute industry executive who died in March 2009. They moved to Dundee, Scotland, where she remained until her death in 2019. They had two daughters and two sons, and fourteen grandchildren. Her son, Robin Pilcher, is also a novelist.

In 1949, her first book, a romance novel, was published by Mills & Boon, under the pseudonym Jane Fraser. She published a further ten novels under that name. In 1955, she also began writing under her married name Rosamunde Pilcher, by 1965 she her own name to all of her novels. In 1996, her novel Coming Home won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by Romantic Novelists' Association. She retired from writing in 2000 following publication of Winter Solstice. Two years later, she was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 5,180 reviews
Profile Image for Rachael.
181 reviews136 followers
June 11, 2007
There's something about this book that always makes me resolve to move to Cornwall, bake lots of bread and have an enormous flower garden, and spend the rest of my days painting huge swathes of light on the beaches. That aside, this is one book that I regularly read every six months and love each time. I don't know how to describe it. Just go read it.
Profile Image for Sara.
Author听1 book861 followers
February 22, 2022
I seldom find myself blubbering over a book anymore. I used to do it when I was younger, but my insides seem to have toughened as I have aged. My sentimental side is harder to access, and even when a book evokes strong feelings I do not really cry. Well, Pilcher put the lie to that today. I cried like I was 15 again, felt foolish doing it, and felt clean and empty afterward.

OK, maybe I was just needing a good cry. It happens. But, there was something very touching in the way Pilcher presented this story; a truthfulness that made it special. It was a re-read, but goodness knows almost thirty years between reads made it brand new in many ways.

I thought of my own mother when I read these lines: "Yes, she was lovely. But more than that, she was warm and funny and loving. Hot-tempered one moment, and laughing the next. And she could make a home anywhere. She carried a sort of security about with her. I can't think of a single person who didn't love her. I still think about her every day of my life. Sometimes she seems very dead. And other times, I can't believe that she isn't somewhere in the house and that a door won't open and she'll be there."

For me, she nailed what it is to lose someone you truly love.

And this passage that might be best understood by someone my own age, and yet I know I must have understood it even when I was so young, reading this for the first time:

"A ring was the accepted sign of infinity, eternity. If her own life was that carefully described pencil line, she knew all at once that the two ends were drawing close together. I have come full circle, she told herself, and wondered what had happened to all the years. It was a question which, from time to time, caused her some anxiety and left her fretting with a dreadful sense of waste. But now, it seemed, the question had become irrelevant, and so the answer, whatever it was, was no longer of any importance."

Rosamunde Pilcher must have loved deeply, lost someone very close, known greedy and intemperate people, turned the earth in her own garden, shared meals with irreplaceable friends, and embraced a few kindred spirits in her day. She knows all those things too well to have made them up out of air. And, to some extent, that is what we all know of life. The details, the little things that make it bearable, the larger things that make it seems impossible to live through, these are the hallmarks of humanity. In the end, perhaps I cry not for the characters in a book but for myself.
Profile Image for Candi.
692 reviews5,336 followers
February 14, 2017
"The most ordinary of prospects caused her to stop and stare. The last of the leaves dropped from the trees, and the bare branches made lace against pale skies. Sun after rain turned cobbled streets blue as fish scales, dazzling to the eye. Autumn winds, whipping the bay to a scud of white-caps, brought with them, not cold, but a surging sense of vitality鈥�"

Penelope Keeling knows how to live life to the fullest and I absolutely adore her! She grasps those things that matter most in life 鈥� the comfort of a home, the security of a loving mother, the laughter of friends and family, the feel of soil and the beauty of the outdoors, the enticing smells of home-cooked meals, and the allure of a splendid painting. When I come across a character in one of my books that touches me and makes me want to re-examine my own life, then I know I have found a gem.

Of course, we鈥檙e all familiar with the phrase 鈥渄on鈥檛 judge a book by its cover鈥�. Unfortunately, I have been guilty of that offense in the past and no less so with this book. I have seen Rosamunde Pilcher鈥檚 novels in bookstores and libraries and have admittedly walked right on by due to their overly feminine and botanic covers. I didn鈥檛 think they were "my sort of book". However, I decided to give this one a try when I discovered some trusted 欧宝娱乐 friends were reading this. Well, thank goodness I did 鈥� such a true delight! At the outset, we learn that Penelope is a sixty-four-year old widow that has had a surprise glimpse at her own mortality. We are introduced to her three adult children 鈥� Nancy, Olivia and Noel - as well as others that have touched her life at some point or another 鈥� her treasured mother and father, an ill-suited husband, a loyal friend, a devoted lover, a grieving young woman and a secretive yet trustworthy gardener. Each character is drawn with such depth and clarity that I felt I really knew each and every one of them. The title of this novel, The Shell Seekers, derives from a painting given to Penelope by her father, the prominent artist Lawrence Stern. When the now deceased Lawrence Stern鈥檚 works of art become much sought-after, the value of this and other pieces increases significantly. Each of Penelope鈥檚 children have their own thoughts about what should be done with this and other works in their mother鈥檚 possession. What they desire reveals to us much about each of them, their innermost substance. As with real people, what we see is not all pretty. Pilcher has the gift of depicting riveting family dynamics. "Family rows are like car accidents. Every family thinks, 鈥業t couldn鈥檛 happen to us,鈥� but it can happen to everybody. The only way to avoid them is to drive with the greatest care and have much consideration for others."

Penelope makes a journey to Cornwall, both in spirit and literally, where she sweeps us along to revel in the landscape and her own cherished memories. I loved every minute of this visit and will miss my time spent with Penelope. Heart-warming, memorable, and a bit of a tear-jerker, The Shell Seekers is a treasure I won鈥檛 soon forget. I am quite pleased that several more Rosamunde Pilcher novels now grace my bookshelf with their blossoming covers and their promise of comfort and pure reading satisfaction.
Profile Image for Kenny.
575 reviews1,418 followers
February 17, 2025
鈥淪he believed, of course ... because without something to believe in, life would be intolerable.鈥�
~~~


1

I definitely was not excited to read . My mother had chosen it for her book club; telling us, it was one of her favorite books of all time. I foolishly viewed this as a woman's book, no, an old woman's book.

How wrong I was. I absolutely loved . My only regret is that I hadn't visited the worlds created by sooner.

I was sucked into this world from the start. I loved Penelope from the opening paragraph, and loved how her story progressed. I also loved that this story was told in nonlinear fashion, and each chapter focused on a character who moved through Penelope's life. And yet, this is Penelope Keeling鈥檚 story from start to finish ~~ even when she is not present.

1

Penelope is a stylish, elegant woman even in her well-worn, often shabby clothes. Her generosity, hard work, joie de vivre, understanding, and caring for others never seems to falter. Penelope shines like a golden thread in the tapestry of her life and the lives of others. She loves unconditionally, rises above mistakes ~~ both hers and those of others; she makes do with what life has given her.

Penelope's philosophy is that money buys, not just material things, but it also buys freedom, independence, dignity, learning, and time. As she ages, she comes to believe that the greatest gift a parent can give the children is to maintain one鈥檚 independence, be self-reliant, and not witless ~~ a lesson she learned from her father.

As we journey with Penelope we view her life through both the best of times, and the difficult times. Through it all, we witness what a strong, caring woman, wonderful woman she is.

We experience Penelope's life in Cornwall, growing up her artist father and her French mother Sophie, We come to know the village and her people; we meet Doris and her two sons, evacuees of WWII. Later, we visit London and Spain through Penelope's eyes. We see Penelope as she experiencing living in her daughter Olivia's world and meet her friends Cosmo and Antonia. We become absorbed in the never-ending conflicts of her other two children, Nancy and Noel. In her old age we experience the wonderful gift Antonia and her young friend Danus bring to her.

1

Penelope's story reveals so much of human nature, of who we are. The Shell Seekers has charms all its own, and you definitely should experience these charms.

1
Profile Image for Mark  Porton.
570 reviews704 followers
October 8, 2024
This vast family drama centres on the life of Penelope. The story begins with her discharging herself from hospital after a suspecteded heart attack. If you read this, you鈥檒l be struck by Penelope, I guarantee it. You will find no spirit freer, and no person as accepting as dear Penelope.

Nancy, Olivia, and Noel are her three adult children. Olivia, a publishing executive was my favourite 鈥� clear headed, ambitious, business-like, sensible and the closest to her mother. The other two 鈥� Nancy, is a bubbling mess of self-indulged emotion with a bland husband and two spoiled children. The son Noel is a selfish man, money-oriented and out for what he can get. Both Nancy and Noel are as annoying as can be.

Each chapter centres around one of the many characters in this book and is titled as such. The cast is large and varied. Looking back, we learn about her parents, her father, a famous artist (the painter of The Shell Seekers) and her mother, a young French woman. The painting, and other works by her father become central to this story as Penelope enters her sixties, as two of her children are keen to reap the benefits of their sale value 鈥� which is considerable. The family squabbles are so real.

Penelope marries an annoying man called Ambrose, and she has a love affair with a man named Richard during WWII. Penelope and Richard seem to be a match made in heaven.

There is everything you would expect in this almost seven-hundred-page family saga 鈥� however, love and loss predominates.

This writer did such a brilliant job of breathing life into these characters, To the extent the last fifty pages is one of the most emotional and riveting passages of a book I have read.

Heartbreaking, blissful, triumphant.

5 Stars
Profile Image for Lucy.
515 reviews706 followers
August 7, 2009
From its supermarket cover (have you seen it? It felt embarrassing to have such a romantically embossed book in my hands) to its one-dimensional characters, the entire book reminded me of a heavyweight beach read.

So....what should get a "nice summer read" review instead trips me up for weeks, unable to write anything about this book and a dozen others because I'm forced to question my reasoning. Why do I feel so bad about being critical of this book? Mostly, I think it's because many friends and readers I know love this book. But, I also think my stupor of thought is a result of a former self once being able to love this book. My tastes have changed.

It's frustrating, because I think the themes Pilcher wrote about are serious enough to do well. Inheritance, greed, sentimentality, playing favorites with children, staying in a loveless marriage, putting a relationship that never fully developed on a pedestal because it escaped the inevitable boredom, irritation, and complacency that all relationships eventually go through. These are things you don't usually find underneath a flowery cover.

Overall, The Shell Seekers didn't feel wholly honest to me. The situations did have a semblance of reality. I imagine most of us would have some serious introspection if we discovered a piece of art we owned was suddenly very valuable, especially any art we owned that was created by a beloved relative. However, the characters, written as people who you should like (Penelope, Olivia, Richard), or who you should not like (Nancy, Neil, horrible grandmother and husband whose names I can't remember) didn't have motives - or at least any that I understood. It appears to me that Pilcher confused having the coveted flawed character with having bad characters. Just because a character makes bad choices shouldn't make them bad. I wanted to know why Nancy and Neil cared more about money than their grandfather's painting. Was Neil a gambler and in debt and needed cash? Did Nancy think her marriage would fall apart if she didn't continue to be the lavish bride that her grandmother turned her into?

Why in the world would Penelope stay in her never-should-have-happened-marriage when the author has done her best to describe her as a free-spirit, raised by an athiest father and French mother who both could have cared less if she married the father of her baby or took a lover while her husband (who she hoped would either die or leave her for someone else) was at war, who placed a nontraditional value to things (wasn't that the point of the the symbolic painting? Most people would care to know how much it was worth. But not Penelope, who would rather garden and feed people large meals)? Why were Neil and Nancy so shallow and greedy? Because they were genetically like their father and grandmother (who were also inexplicably bad)? Why did Olivia get such a free pass from her mother? Why did we have to invest so much time with her in Greece with her old and linen-clad lover (who I kept imaging as Kris Kristofferson. Odd)? Was I supposed to really care about her gardener's epilepsy?

So many more questions that have no satisfying answers because, once again, I don't think this is meant as a serious book. In which case, I'm being snobby and critical. Or it was meant as a serious book and I'm being picky and callous. Or snobby and critical. Take your pick.

Oh my...this is such a bad book review. For the confused, I'll tidy things up. I enjoyed the book. I'm disappointed it wasn't more.

And that worries me.

Because that means I'm a book snob

Oh....curse you, Shell Seekers! Why did I ever open your abysmal cover with flowers and shiny typeface?


Why? Because there's a well known saying about books and their covers. And I fell for it.
Profile Image for Dem.
1,245 reviews1,378 followers
July 1, 2017
3.5 Stars

A beautifully written character driven novel about family and life, love and loss, greed and hope, a book that has the charm and eloquence of books from a bygone era, just a good old fashioned family saga, a story with real characters and places that are interesting and vivid.

I had never read a book by this author before and as a couple of Goodread friends have really enjoyed her novels and the fact I saw it on the BBC list of Top 100 books I just had to try one and I was in not disappointed by the story or the writing style as the characters and images in the novel are so well drawn with little details that bring a wonderful sense of time and place to the story which makes this novel so readable and enjoyable.

This is the type of novel that while it didn't move me or have me on the edge of my seat, I loved picking it up and spending time with the characters and just enjoyed the good feeling it gave me. It would make a terrific holiday read or a book for cosy winter nights by the fire, It the sort of book I will remember reading 10 years from now and still be able to recall the characters.
I did find the book a tad long but I am not a fan of long books anyhow but I am certainly looking forward to reading more by this author soon.
I bought a paperback edition of this novel and delighted to place this one on my bookshelf for future re-reading.
Profile Image for Abeer Hoque.
Author听7 books133 followers
June 20, 2009
I thought this book would be better for all its NYT Book Review (and other) praise, but it wasn't. Ostensibly a sprawling family saga centring around matriarch Penelope, it's basically the same 2 or 3 characters with different names playing out over three generations.

If you're a "good" character, then you're independent, stubborn, glossy haired, tall, beautiful. You love France, holiday in Spain, dream of Cornwall, and believe in children out of wedlock and monied bohemian lifestyles (but not too monied, nor do you care too much about cashola, but it doesn't matter because it will come pouring down in the hundreds of thousands anyway). You know and namedrop all the same (white) (western) painters and authors. You joined the war effort due to the "cultured refugee faced" (I kid you not) Jews who rent rooms in your massive inherited London mansion. You are or love gardeners or artists or offspring of artists. You have a 50% chance of dying in the great war.

If you're a "bad" character, you endlessly harp on class and money and other selfish concerns. You have no interest in intimacy or art or any higher calling than social climbing and your awful ugly children and awful ugly spouse or your anorexic supermodel lover of the mo. You are either ugly and empty or beautiful and empty. You hate gardeners.

Everyone, regardless of integrity or intention, wants a scotch and soda.

So why did I plow through 500+ pages of this? And even tear up at moments? Because the idea of lives fully lived is a powerful one and Ms. Pilcher tells a well paced story, even if it is written in a hackneyed trashy romance style. Certainly it wasn't hard to blow through, and it was sort of fun watching all the foils of the story unfold in mediocrity. I left my copy in Newark Airport on top of the recycling bin for someone else to take it up or pitch it in.
Profile Image for Mathew.
25 reviews8 followers
September 28, 2008
Rosamund Pilcher is consistently marketed via book jackets covered with flowers. I'm not sure why. On the surface, Pilcher's stories are nostalgic and evocative of magical other places where good things always happen to good people; but her novels and characters are consistently rich, complicated, and subtle. I've not read another author who could draw the infuriating imperfections and dysfunctions of family so accurately, or so compassionately. It's easy to admire, then almost despise, and then love her characters for being so very human.

The Shell Seekers, like so many of Pilcher's stories, is set in England, told from the vantage of a menagerie of characters whose lives are bound together by various ties of kinship and obligation. At first, one is content to get to know the cast as their various stories unfold, but little by little the pieces - and the people - come together, and by the end one realizes how incredibly tight this novel is.

It's the sort of novel that restores faith in life, and in fiction.
Profile Image for Laura.
201 reviews22 followers
March 1, 2012
This is one of my favorite books of all time, but I'd be hard-pressed to explain why. The criticisms of this book are true enough--semi-cliched characters and all--but I just love them. I love Penelope and this book makes me want to garden and cook soup and let everyone be themselves even if they're stuffy and stodgy or not at all in fashion. I love that her personal life is real, as in far from perfect--her societally correct husband was miserable and her true love wasn't allowed. I love that Antonia happens into Penelope's life and becomes inextricably linked and a better 'granddaughter' than her biological grandkids. One of my favorite lines is towards the end where it is said "Penelope may not believe in God, but I am quite sure that God believes in her..." This is a curl up in a chair with a mug of tea, blanket and wallow in the familiarity of it all kind of book.

I have read other Rosamunde Pilcher novels, and none of them had this same effect on me. There's just something about this story....
Profile Image for Margitte.
1,188 reviews646 followers
March 7, 2017
From the blurb:

"Set in London and Cornwall from World War II to present(1983), The Shell Seekers tells the story of the Keeling family, and of the passions and heartbreak that have held them together for three generations. The family centers around Penelope, and it is her love, courage, and sense of values that determine the course of all their lives. Deftly shifting back and forth in time, each chapter centers on one of the principal players in the family's history. The unifying thread is an oil painting entitled "The Shell Seekers," done by Penelope's father. It is this painting that symbolizes to Penelope the ties between the generations. But it is the fate of this painting that just may tear the family apart.
"Family rows are like car accidents. Every family thinks, 鈥業t couldn鈥檛 happen to us', but it can happen to everybody. The only way to avoid them is to drive with the greatest care and have much consideration for others."
MY THOUGHTS
I don't really want to write a review for this book, since it touched me so deeply, and I found such a connection with Penelope, that I would rather have talked about the bond of friendship we have formed! I almost felt like sitting down and write her a letter. It felt that personal.

In that spirit I can only conclude that it was a tremendous moment when I started reading this book by Rosamunde Pilcher. It was like opening the door to a very familiar home. Meave Binchy had this effect on me.

The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher was my introduction to this author, and it was a unforgettably good experience.
Perhaps you never completely grew up until your mother died
Family saga; a story of a courageous woman; a compassionate tale of hardship and wonder; the making of a family; the bonds of blood and destiny. It's all there and written in tasteful and beautiful prose.

We always talk about a light read to indicate the tone of a book. In this case it will have to be described as a medium read, since the horrors of war form part of the saga, but not as brutal and devastating as the violent counterparts by other authors. The book shows another side of WWII than the one we would normally encounter in historical fiction. A cup full of colorful petals is heaped onto an otherwise mono-colored part of history.

Recommended to family saga-readers.
Profile Image for Tadiana 鉁㎞ight Owl鈽�.
1,880 reviews23.2k followers
February 26, 2019
An older woman looks back on her life, thinks about her family, and tries to decide what to do with a valuable painting that she's inherited from her father, an artist.

I read this back in the day and honestly don't remember any of the details, but I do remember enjoying this read.
Profile Image for Karren  Sandercock .
1,181 reviews336 followers
November 8, 2023
Penelope Keeling is sixty four, she鈥檚 just had a heart attack and it makes her reflect on her life. She鈥檚 the daughter of the famous Victorian era artist Lawrence Stern, her mother Sophie was French and they lived a free spirited life in London and Cornwall. Hers was a happy childhood, filled with love and her parents had so many wonderful and interesting friends. I guess she was a little na茂ve, she fell for and married the first man she dated Ambrose Keeling and it was a big mistake. She had three children, Nancy, Olivia and Noel and her children are all very different in temperament.

Penelope has always been independent, she lives in a cottage in Gloucestershire, with a beautiful garden and now her children are worried it鈥檚 too much for her. Penelope is a wonderful cook, she loves to entertain and finds young people refreshing. Two of her children discover their grandfather鈥檚 painting are going up in value, is their mother sensible enough to look after them and how much are they worth? Penelope isn鈥檛 silly, she鈥檚 one step ahead of her kids, if anyone decides what becomes of her father鈥檚 paintings and sketches it will be her.

The Shell Seekers is a classic book, a long one and each page has been written to be slowly savored by the reader. A masterpiece by Rosamunde Pilcher, rich in characters and places, it鈥檚 about life, Penelope lives hers to the fullest, and she鈥檚 delightful. A timeless novel to read and five stars from me.
Profile Image for Beverly.
946 reviews427 followers
October 17, 2022
I read The Shell Seekers with Karina, my good friend on 欧宝娱乐. This is a book about family, but not about the importance of a loving, congenial group of people, but what happens when that is not the case. Penelope Keeling is a warm, delightful person with a deft hand at making a house a home. She is in her sixties when the story begins. Penelope loves nature and food and all the good things of life. This gift of joy had been handed down to her by her artist father and French mother. Unfortunately, her children do not possess the lust for life that she has and she blames this on the cold, grasping man she married without truly knowing his nature.

Her three children are all difficult in their own way. I read in one review that it gives a parent permission to dislike their own children. Nancy and Noel are the eldest and are particularly icky, only interested in their mother's money. Both are unpleasant to be around in their own particular way. Noel wants to steal something from his mother (who inherited valuable paintings from her father) but doesn't have enough ambition to be a competent thief. Olivia, the youngest, is only interested in her career. Of the three, Olivia is the least objectionable, although I really couldn't stand her myself. She is the type of boss who seems to gleefully chastise an employee at the beginning of the book.

The story weaves through the past and present and we discover that Penelope has secrets: and although she loves her children, it will be complete strangers who she foresees will inherit the joy that her parents gave her.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
141 reviews72 followers
May 20, 2010
You really can't judge a book by its cover.

People have recommended Rosamunde Pilcher's books to me for years, and I refused to read them because all the covers looked like they had been marinated in mothballs. But after spying "The Shell Seekers" on the BBC's "The Big Read: Top 100 Books," I decided to bite the bullet and give it a try. Annoyingly, several people had put it on reserve at the library before me, so by the time I received it, I wasn't nearly as enthusiastic as I had been when I had originally ordered it. To add insult to injury, my copy had a cover that resembled a fussy spinster's guest room wallpaper. I literally had to fight the urge to hide the book under my jacket, lest one of my hipster friends caught sight of me leaving the building with it.

But then I opened the front cover and started to read. And was captivated by the first sentence. And the second. By the time I had reached the last page, I was head over heels in love with this book. If you're smart enough to overlook a stupid looking cover for the sake of a great read, pick up this book. You won't be sorry.
Profile Image for [ J o ].
1,962 reviews528 followers
June 30, 2023
Read as part of , based on the BBC's Big Read Poll of 2003.

I'm not a huge fan of genreless fiction, not in the least when it has a strong romance-vibe, but I found The Shell Seekers to be a pleasant read. It was not at all taxing and can be described as escapist literature, and requires not an awful lot of mental agility to get through, but that was part of its charm.

The best thing about the book was how splendidly well it was written. I wasn't hugely captivated by the plot, in fact, I thought it was rather weak and there were about 200 superfluous pages, with some extremely tedious moments during the mid-way section that meant I had to put it down for a few days and return to after a short break; having said that, it was a lovely journey to go on and I found myself transported to the wonderful places that the characters inhabited.

Speaking of which, I though Penelope was such a wonderful, breath-of-fresh-air character. It's a rare thing in books these days to have a wonderful, strong, independent older woman as a main character in any kind of medium (be it books, film or TV) and I enjoyed her immensely. The other characters were a little bit too background for me, though I enjoyed them as they were, and found they all fit in with each other well.

It is not a book to change lives, it is simply something to read and enjoy. I did enjoy it, despite my misgivings, though it won't be read again, nor perhaps will it be much thought of ever. But I thoroughly enjoyed reading something that was so well-written and just lovely to get around to.
Profile Image for Antoinette.
985 reviews182 followers
December 30, 2020
I read this book for the first time in 1991. I had this great urge to reread it for two reasons: 1) I remember it being a beautiful engrossing story of a woman, Penelope Keeling, and her life, loves and family. 2) Without any travel this past year, I yearned to go back to Cornwall, so this book took me there in spirit at least.

I think I may have loved it even more on my second read. The perfect book to while away time over the holidays. I loved getting to reconnect with Penelope again. She was a woman who valued what was important in life- which was her family and friends, her garden, her gatherings around a supper table.

The Shell Seekers, the title, refers to a painting her father had done. It has been a part of her life forever, but now the time has come to decide what to do with it.

Rosamunde Pilcher knows how to create people. Every person was so well drawn out. I felt that I knew them all. You can feel her love for Cornwall throughout the book (understandably so!). I have been to St Ives twice and Land鈥檚 End- I could feel the wind and the surf, I was walking along with Penelope and enjoying those stunning views. If you haven鈥檛 been there, this book will make you want to go for sure.

鈥� And in this life, nothing good is ever lost. It stays part of a person, becomes part of their character. So part of you goes everywhere with me. And part of me is yours forever.鈥�

Perfect book to loose yourself in!

Profile Image for Diane Barnes.
1,530 reviews446 followers
September 12, 2024
I've just spent the most wonderful week lost in a book. I first read this when it was published in 1987. I remember loving it dearly, but not much more, nothing at all if truth be told. So a re-read turned into a first read, and I got to delight in it twice. It is the life of Penelope Keeling, daughter of an artist, quite the Bohemian, a warm and loving woman, determined to make the best of whatever life handed her. As life handed her the second world War at the age of 19, she made some decisions that affected the rest of her life, for good and ill. Some of this time was spent in Cornwall, my favorite area for fictional settings, some in London, and a lot in a small village in the Cotswolds, and her home of Podmore Thatch.

This novel is so full of everything: loving families, ungrateful children, good friends, kind strangers, a bad marriage, a wartime love affair, as well as incidentals as art, history, gardening, food and drink. Also, as it's an English novel, lots of tea. I loved every word of it, and felt the 630 pages were not enough, I could have gone on much longer.

I'm pretty sure I came upon this book the first time through Book-of-the-month club. (Remember that?) Pre 欧宝娱乐 and Amazon, that was how we were informed of new releases and books we might never have come across even in a bookstore. I looked forward to those catalogs in the mail each month and spent hours perusing them. Not quite as much fun as Scholastic Book Fairs, but a close second.

Do yourself a favor and dive into this one, for the first or second time. It reminds us that this is not an easy world to live in, now or then, but life is what you make of it. Choose happiness.
Profile Image for Lisa (NY).
1,974 reviews790 followers
August 25, 2022
This sprawling multi generational novel reminds me of the kind of book I used to read decades ago. It is an old fashioned 鈥渨omen鈥檚鈥� novel with a wonderful, offbeat main character. A great vacation treat - over 600 pages but I zipped through it.
Profile Image for Charles.
218 reviews
May 5, 2025
鈥溾€楬ave a cup of tea,鈥� suggested Penelope, as she always did.

鈥榃ell, I wouldn鈥檛 mind,鈥� said Mrs. Plackett, as she always did.

The morning was on its way.鈥�


As characters repeatedly meet over tea, a family history reveals itself, thanks to an old painting鈥檚 potential market value setting imaginations 鈥� and memories 鈥� on fire. At the heart of the story is Penelope, mother of three adult children, and daughter of the late Lawrence Stern, a Victorian painter. The times are now the 1980s, and as the market heats up for period pieces, a family heirloom, hanging in Penelope鈥檚 home, suddenly sparks a lifetime of recollections.

Although everyone really does keep running after a kettle in this novel, the story isn鈥檛 quite as old-fashioned as you might expect, nor is Penelope, and it鈥檚 with a certain mastery that the book brushes engaging portraits of capable women, surrounding them with a healthy support cast. Family dynamics inspire realistic dialogues, some of them softly mockful.

Penelope鈥檚 three children each embody a paradigm: one is independence, another one is greed, and a third one personifies snootiness. Their motivations aren鈥檛 nearly as deeply explored as their mother鈥檚, but their very presence carries the novel along when Penelope herself is occupied or otherwise out of focus. With various secondary characters entering and exiting the story to parade their own quirks as well, the pace remains (mostly) lively.

While the bulk of the action takes place at a Cotswolds cottage by the picturesque name of Podmore鈥檚 Thatch, other locations such as London are on hand to provide contrast. They ignite the occasional sense of wanderlust, and this has to be the first time I come across a reference to Ibiza that doesn鈥檛 evoke nightlong partying, but rather the previous, presumably simpler days of bohemian foreigners rubbing elbows with the island鈥檚 rural inhabitants; that is, pre-mass tourism. I remember being similarly captivated with descriptions of pre-touristy Barcelona in Merc猫 Rodoreda鈥檚 In Diamond Square. This particular trick in a novel seems to make for a charming surprise every time, without fully dragging the genre towards historical fiction; it鈥檚 a context more than a focus, and you could just as well drop me into fairyland, when this happens.

Between tales of old painters, wartime woes, concealed love affairs, and inheritance concerns, The Shell Seekers packs a potential wallop, which it considerably smoothes down by directing the reader鈥檚 attention to countryside candour and neighbourliness above all else. This is a cozy read, something of a charm operation, and less of a study in contrasts 鈥� despite their obvious role in the story 鈥� than an uplifting take on family affairs, even when things get complicated. You could say that through Penelope鈥檚 eyes, Rosamunde Pilcher chooses to see the good in everyone, showing a steadfast commitment to benevolence and self-restraint rather than full-blown drama, regardless of how badly supporting characters may behave.

Solid book. Soft angles. A few fully assumed clich茅s, and a great use of geography. This is as close to a romance novel as I dare approach.

(I may never know whether the passage was meant to be funny, but at some point Penelope seems to become distracted and offers a guest coffee, not tea, when he shows up at the cottage. Needless to say, he turns it down. What was the woman thinking?)
Profile Image for Suz.
1,476 reviews783 followers
July 12, 2019
I did not review books at this stage. In fact, this book lead me to 欧宝娱乐 for the first time ever. I remember Googling this book from the car on the way home from summer holidays, and ultimately I discovered this wonderful site that way. This is the first read from this author, I remember enjoying it immensely and then borrowed a bunch from my mum. After signing up here, of course!
Profile Image for Karen J.
473 reviews244 followers
September 10, 2022
猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍

Such an amazing and extremely well written story!
Profile Image for Ingrid.
1,477 reviews112 followers
February 9, 2019
I remember reading this book in one sitting in the nineties, and what a sitting it was! My husband had business meetings in Basingstoke and I had joined him. It was May, nice weather, so I chose a bench in the park and started reading. Of course I walked around the centre and had lunch but for the rest of the time I just sat on that bench reading and had finished the book by the end of that day. I have read other books by her, but I've never enjoyed them as much. Now Ms. Pilcher has died on the 6th of February and I have the feeling that I should read The shell seekers again as a tribute and to see if I'm still as carried away by it as I was then.
Profile Image for Cathrine 鈽笍 .
774 reviews394 followers
January 22, 2025
5 馃悮馃悮馃悮馃悮馃悮
Inspired to do a reread of this after a couple of friends did the same. I remembered nothing of the story so it was like the first time. One of the most enjoyable audiobooks ever consumed, I'm sad it's over.
Profile Image for Nika.
399 reviews166 followers
January 4, 2025
校褏, 褟泻芯褞 卸 谐邪褉薪芯褞 斜褍谢邪 褨写械褟 锌芯褔邪褌懈 褉褨泻 蟹 袩褨谢褔械褉 鉂わ笍鈥嶐煩寡椦� 泻薪懈谐懈 褟泻 褋锌褉邪胁卸薪褨褋褨薪褜泻褨 谢褨泻懈 写谢褟 写褍褕褨 鉂わ笍鈥嶐煩剐叫� 胁褋械 褌邪屑, 蟹胁褨褋薪芯, 褌邪泻 褋芯薪褟褔薪芯 褨 褉褨胁薪芯, 邪谢械 胁褉械褕褌褨 - 褍 泻芯谐芯 胁 卸懈褌褌褨 褌邪泻 斜褍胁邪褦?

笑械 褨褋褌芯褉褨褟 袩械薪械谢芯锌懈, 褟泻邪 胁卸械 斜褍写褍褔懈 褋褨薪褜泄芯褉芯屑 芯蟹懈褉邪褞褔懈褋褜 薪邪蟹邪写 锌褉懈谐邪写褍褦 锟斤拷褋褨 胁邪卸谢懈胁褨 褌邪 蟹薪邪褔褍褖褨 锌芯写褨褩 褌邪 谢褞写械泄, 褟泻褨 斜褍谢懈 锌芯褉褍褔鉂わ笍鈥嶐煩�
孝褉褨褕泻懈, 蟹胁褨褋薪芯, 斜褍谢芯 褨 锌褉芯 胁褨泄薪褍 - 邪谢械 褑械 斜褍谢芯 锌芯屑褨褔薪械 写谢褟 屑械薪械 芯褋芯斜懈褋褌芯, 斜芯 卸 芦胁卸械 褏褌芯褋褜 褔械褉械蟹 褑械 锌褉芯褏芯写懈胁禄
袛褨褌械泄 褩褩 褏芯褌褨谢芯褋褟 锌褉懈斜懈褌懈, 邪谢械 胁褉械褕褌褨 胁芯薪懈 薪械 斜褍谢懈 褌褍褌 芯褋薪芯胁薪懈屑懈

袪邪写卸褍 馃檶


小锌芯写褨胁邪褞褋褜, 袪袦 斜褍写械 泻芯卸薪芯谐芯 褉芯泻褍 胁懈写邪胁邪褌懈 锌芯 泻薪懈卸械褔褑褨
Profile Image for Jeanette.
3,892 reviews812 followers
December 24, 2015
Yes, I have to add agreement. She wrote with such compassion without a hint of the maudlin. Her books were like rich soothing chocolate - perfect for blooming a centered core of caring/ peaceful contemplation. And they never enabled trouble or dysfunction, but seemed to disarm it at the source.

The flowers on the bookcovers I understand. Graphics of her gardens. Her characters often centered themselves in gardening and her plant depth (knowledge of form and placements) was phenomenal.
Profile Image for Susu.
72 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2017
I read this years ago when I lived in Seattle. I still remember it. A plot that one remembers for 20 years speaks a lot for a novel.
Profile Image for Sotiris Karaiskos.
1,223 reviews113 followers
August 29, 2019
Looking for interesting romantic readings in the last few days I wandered around a bit here and there but eventually decided to go for something safe and secure in this genre, namely Rosamunde Pilcher. Of course in the case of the romance of her books I don't think it has much to do with the mass-produced romances that dominate nowadays, it's something different. The element of love is dominant but not in the form of the great passion that drives the protagonists and pushes them into irrational decisions, it is something calmer, more mature, more conscious, something real that therefore does not always have a happy ending. There is a sentimentalism expressed through delicate and poetic descriptions, but there is a restraint by the author that prevents slipping into ridicule.

With that in mind - and confirming it afterward - I began reading a book that revolves mainly over two periods, before and during World War II and into the mid-1980s. Two completely different eras and two situations that have aparently nothing common, the only thing in common is that in both eras - even in the materialistic 80s - some people were living their lives with a real romanticism, looking for love and friendship, appreciating nature and the small pleasures, truly loving art, putting fame and wealth in second place. Another common was that they had against them frivolous people who did not appreciate anything, did not really love and make as a purpose in their lives anything meaningless, making themselves and their own people unhappy. The protagonist of our story, Penelope, is one of those romantic people, the daughter of a famous painter, who wants to live her last years by staying true to her ideas, cultivating her garden, enjoying all the joys that she can, remembering her past, admiring the few paintings left by her father. Around her, there are people with similar perceptions who stoically face difficulties and admire the beauty they see around them, with each other being dominated by love and respect and offering the reader some very tender and sensitive moments. Two of her three children, however, are not like this, having inherited this behavior from their father, and by all means, trying to serve their selfish ends, upset Sweet Penelope and frustrate her. But like all romantic people, however, our heroine does not long for herself and makes her selfless plans, which often go against what is considered reasonable, and through them the author leads us on a bittersweet journey to the most beautiful and noble emotions, in the tragic but also beautiful moments of the past, in the pictures of Cornwall, a journey together with some wonderful characters.

In a nutshell, in this book I found what I was looking for in order to satisfy my romantic end-of-summer mood, a romantic story - or a series of such - written in the wonderful way of Rosamunde Pilcher who knows how to enchant the reader, to fill him with beautiful images and show him how to deal with life with courage and optimism, whatever difficulties he may encounter on his way.

螒谓伪味畏蟿蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟿喂蟼 蟿蔚位蔚蠀蟿伪委蔚蟼 畏渭苇蟻蔚蟼 蔚谓未喂伪蠁苇蟻慰谓蟿伪 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂魏维 伪谓伪纬谓蠋蟽渭伪蟿伪 蟺蔚蟻喂蟺位伪谓萎胃畏魏伪 位委纬慰 伪蟺蠈 蔚未蠋 魏伪喂 伪蟺蠈 蔚魏蔚委 伪位位维 蟿蔚位喂魏维 伪蟺慰蠁维蟽喂蟽伪 谓伪 蟺维蠅 蟽蔚 魏维蟿喂 蟽委纬慰蠀蟻慰 魏伪喂 伪蟽蠁伪位苇蟼 蟽蔚 伪蠀蟿蠈 蟿慰 蔚委未慰蟼, 未畏位伪未萎 蟽蟿畏谓 Rosamunde Pilcher. 螔苇尾伪喂伪 蟽蟿畏谓 蟺蔚蟻委蟺蟿蠅蟽畏 蟿畏蟼 慰 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂蟽渭蠈蟼 蟿蠅谓 尾喂尾位委蠅谓 蟿畏蟼 未蔚谓 谓慰渭委味蠅 蠈蟿喂 苇蠂蔚喂 蟺慰位蠉 渭蔚纬维位畏 蟽蠂苇蟽畏 渭蔚 蟿伪 蟻慰渭维谓蟿味伪 渭伪味喂魏萎蟼 蟺伪蟻伪纬蠅纬萎蟼 蟿慰蠀 魏蠀蟻喂伪蟻蠂慰蠉谓, 蔚委谓伪喂 魏维蟿喂 未喂伪蠁慰蟻蔚蟿喂魏蠈. 螘委谓伪喂 魏蠀蟻委伪蟻蠂慰 蟿慰 蟽蟿慰喂蠂蔚委慰 蟿慰蠀 苇蟻蠅蟿伪 伪位位维 蠈蠂喂 渭蔚 蟿畏 渭慰蟻蠁萎 蟿慰蠀 渭蔚纬维位慰蠀 蟺维胃慰蠀蟼 蟺慰蠀 蟺伪蟻伪蟽苇蟻谓蔚喂 蟿慰蠀蟼 蟺蟻蠅蟿伪纬蠅谓喂蟽蟿苇蟼 魏伪喂 蟿慰蠀蟼 蟽蟺蟻蠋蠂谓蔚喂 蟽蔚 蟺伪蟻维位慰纬蔚蟼 伪蟺慰蠁维蟽蔚喂蟼, 蔚委谓伪喂 魏维蟿喂 蟺喂慰 萎蟻蔚渭慰, 蟺喂慰 蠋蟻喂渭慰, 蟺喂慰 蟽蠀谓蔚喂未畏蟿慰蟺慰喂畏渭苇谓慰, 魏维蟿喂 伪位畏胃喂谓蠈 魏伪喂 纬喂伪 伪蠀蟿蠈 未蔚谓 苇蠂蔚喂 蟺维谓蟿伪 蔚蠀蟿蠀蠂萎 魏伪蟿维位畏尉畏. 违蟺维蟻蠂蔚喂 苇谓伪蟼 蟽蠀谓伪喂蟽胃畏渭伪蟿喂蟽渭蠈蟼 蟺慰蠀 蔚魏未畏位蠋谓蔚蟿伪喂 渭苇蟽伪 伪蟺蠈 蔚蠀伪委蟽胃畏蟿蔚蟼 魏伪喂 蟺慰喂畏蟿喂魏苇蟼 蟺蔚蟻喂纬蟻伪蠁苇蟼, 蠀蟺维蟻蠂蔚喂, 蠈渭蠅蟼, 渭委伪 伪蠀蟿慰蟽蠀纬魏蟻维蟿畏蟽畏 伪蟺蠈 蟿畏 蟽蠀纬纬蟻伪蠁苇伪 蟺慰蠀 蔚渭蟺慰未委味蔚喂 蟿慰 纬位委蟽蟿蟻畏渭伪 蟺蟻慰蟼 蟿畏 纬蔚位慰喂蠈蟿畏蟿伪.

螠蔚 伪蠀蟿维 蠀蟺蠈蠄畏 - 魏伪喂 蔚蟺喂尾蔚尾伪喂蠋谓慰谓蟿伪蟼 蟿伪 蟽蟿畏 蟽蠀谓苇蠂蔚喂伪 - 尉蔚魏委谓畏蟽伪 蟿畏谓 伪谓维纬谓蠅蟽畏 蔚谓蠈蟼 尾喂尾位委慰蠀 蟺慰蠀 蔚尉蔚位委蟽蟽蔚蟿伪喂 魏蠀蟻委蠅蟼 蟽蔚 未蠉慰 蠂蟻慰谓喂魏苇蟼 蟺蔚蟻喂蠈未慰蠀蟼, 蟺蟻喂谓 魏伪喂 魏伪蟿维 蟿畏 未喂维蟻魏蔚喂伪 蟿慰蠀 螖蔚蠀蟿苇蟻慰蠀 螤伪纬魏慰蟽渭委慰蠀 螤慰位苇渭慰蠀 魏伪喂 蟽蟿伪 渭苇蟽伪 蟿畏蟼 未蔚魏伪蔚蟿委伪蟼 蟿慰蠀 '80. 螖蠉慰 蔚蟺慰蠂苇蟼 蔚谓蟿蔚位蠋蟼 未喂伪蠁慰蟻蔚蟿喂魏苇蟼 魏伪喂 未蠉慰 魏伪蟿伪蟽蟿维蟽蔚喂蟼 蟺慰蠀 未蔚谓 苇蠂慰蠀谓 魏伪渭委伪 蟽蠂苇蟽畏 畏 渭委伪 渭蔚 蟿畏谓 维位位畏, 蟿慰 渭蠈谓慰 魏慰喂谓蠈 蔚委谓伪喂 蠈蟿喂 魏伪喂 蟽蟿喂蟼 未蠉慰 蔚蟺慰蠂苇蟼 - 伪魏蠈渭伪 魏伪喂 蟽蟿畏谓 蠀位喂蟽蟿喂魏萎 未蔚魏伪蔚蟿委伪 蟿慰蠀 '80 - 魏维蟺慰喂慰喂 维谓胃蟻蠅蟺慰喂 味慰蠉蟽伪谓 蟿畏 味蠅萎 蟿慰蠀蟼 渭蔚 苇谓伪谓 蟺蟻伪纬渭伪蟿喂魏蠈 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂蟽渭蠈, 伪谓伪味畏蟿蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟿畏谓 伪纬维蟺畏 魏伪喂 蟿畏谓 蠁喂位委伪, 蔚魏蟿喂渭蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟿畏 蠁蠉蟽畏 魏伪喂 蟿喂蟼 渭喂魏蟻苇蟼 伪蟺慰位伪蠉蟽蔚喂蟼, 伪纬伪蟺蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟺蟻伪纬渭伪蟿喂魏维 蟿苇蠂谓畏, 尾维味慰谓蟿伪蟼 蟽蔚 未蔚蠉蟿蔚蟻畏 渭慰委蟻伪 蟿畏谓 蠁萎渭畏 魏伪喂 蟿伪 蟺位慰蠉蟿畏. 螝慰喂谓蠈 萎蟿伪谓 蠁蠀蟽喂魏维 蠈蟿喂 伪蟺苇谓伪谓蟿委 蟿慰蠀蟼 蔚委蠂伪谓 渭伪蟿伪喂蠈未慰尉慰蠀蟼 伪谓胃蟻蠋蟺慰蠀蟼 蟺慰蠀 未蔚谓 蔚魏蟿喂渭慰蠉蟽伪谓 蟿委蟺慰蟿伪, 未蔚谓 伪纬伪蟺慰蠉蟽伪谓 蟺蟻伪纬渭伪蟿喂魏维 魏伪喂 苇尾伪味伪谓 蟽魏慰蟺蠈 蟽蟿畏 味蠅萎 蟿慰蠀蟼 慰蟿喂未萎蟺慰蟿蔚 伪谓慰蠉蟽喂慰, 魏维谓慰谓蟿伪蟼 未蠀蟽蟿蠀蠂喂蟽渭苇谓慰蠀蟼 蟿慰蠀蟼 委未喂慰蠀蟼 魏伪喂 蟿慰蠀蟼 未喂魏慰蠉蟼 蟿慰蠀蟼 伪谓胃蟻蠋蟺慰蠀蟼.

螚 蟺蟻蠅蟿伪纬蠅谓委蟽蟿蟻喂伪 蟿畏蟼 喂蟽蟿慰蟻委伪蟼 渭伪蟼, 畏 螤畏谓蔚位蠈蟺畏, 蔚委谓伪喂 苇谓伪蟼 伪蟺蠈 伪蠀蟿慰蠉蟼 蟿慰蠀蟼 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂魏慰蠉蟼 伪谓胃蟻蠋蟺慰蠀蟼, 魏蠈蟻畏 蔚谓蠈蟼 未喂维蟽畏渭慰蠀 味蠅纬蟻维蠁慰蠀, 蟺慰蠀 胃苇位蔚喂 谓伪 味萎蟽蔚喂 蟿伪 蟿蔚位蔚蠀蟿伪委伪 蟿畏蟼 蠂蟻蠈谓喂伪 渭苇谓慰谓蟿伪蟼 蟺喂蟽蟿萎 蟽蟿喂蟼 喂未苇蔚蟼 蟿畏蟼, 魏伪位位喂蔚蟻纬蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟿慰谓 魏萎蟺慰 蟿畏蟼, 伪蟺慰位伪渭尾维谓慰谓蟿伪蟼 蠈蟽蔚蟼 蠂伪蟻苇蟼 蠀蟺维蟻蠂慰蠀谓 纬喂伪 伪蠀蟿萎谓, 伪谓伪蟺慰位蠋谓蟿伪蟼 蟿慰 蟺伪蟻蔚位胃蠈谓, 胃伪蠀渭维味慰谓蟿伪蟼 蟿慰蠀蟼 蔚位维蠂喂蟽蟿慰蠀蟼 蟺委谓伪魏蔚蟼 蟺慰蠀 蟿畏蟼 维蠁畏蟽蔚 慰 蟺伪蟿苇蟻伪蟼 蟿畏蟼. 螕蠉蟻蠅 蟿畏蟼 蠀蟺维蟻蠂慰蠀谓 维谓胃蟻蠅蟺慰喂 渭蔚 蟺伪蟻蠈渭慰喂蔚蟼 伪谓蟿喂位萎蠄蔚喂蟼 蟺慰蠀 伪谓蟿喂渭蔚蟿蠅蟺委味慰蠀谓 蟽蟿蠅喂魏维 蟿喂蟼 未蠀蟽魏慰位委蔚蟼 魏伪喂 胃伪蠀渭维味慰蠀谓 蟿畏谓 慰渭慰蟻蠁喂维 蠈蟿伪谓 蟿畏谓 尾位苇蟺慰蠀谓 纬蠉蟻蠅 蟿慰蠀蟼, 渭蔚 蟿畏 渭蔚蟿伪尉蠉 蟿慰蠀蟼 蔚蟺伪蠁萎 谓伪 魏蠀蟻喂伪蟻蠂蔚委蟿伪喂 伪蟺蠈 伪纬维蟺畏 魏伪喂 蟽蔚尾伪蟽渭蠈 魏伪喂 谓伪 蟺蟻慰蟽蠁苇蟻蔚喂 蟽蟿慰谓 伪谓伪纬谓蠋蟽蟿畏 渭蔚蟻喂魏苇蟼 蟺慰位蠉 蟿蟻蠀蠁蔚蟻苇蟼 魏伪喂 蔚蠀伪委蟽胃畏蟿蔚蟼 蟽蟿喂纬渭苇蟼. 韦伪 未蠉慰 伪蟺蠈 蟿伪 蟿蟻委伪 蟿畏蟼 蟺伪喂未喂维, 蠈渭蠅蟼, 未蔚谓 蔚委谓伪喂 魏伪胃蠈位慰蠀 苇蟿蟽喂, 苇蠂慰谓蟿伪蟼 魏位畏蟻慰谓慰渭萎蟽蔚喂 伪蠀蟿萎 蟿畏 蟽蠀渭蟺蔚蟻喂蠁慰蟻维 伪蟺蠈 蟿慰谓 蟺伪蟿苇蟻伪 蟿慰蠀蟼, 魏伪喂 渭蔚 魏维胃蔚 蟿蟻蠈蟺慰, 蟺蟻慰蟽蟺伪胃蠋谓蟿伪蟼 谓伪 蔚尉蠀蟺畏蟻蔚蟿萎蟽慰蠀谓 蟿慰蠀蟼 蔚纬蠅喂蟽蟿喂魏慰蠉蟼 蟿慰蠀蟼 蟽魏慰蟺慰蠉蟼, 伪谓伪蟽蟿伪蟿蠋谓慰蠀谓 蟿畏谓 纬位蠀魏喂维 螤畏谓蔚位蠈蟺畏 魏伪喂 蟿畏 纬蔚渭委味慰蠀谓 伪蟺慰纬慰萎蟿蔚蠀蟽畏. 螌蟺蠅蟼 蠈位慰喂 慰喂 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂魏慰委 维谓胃蟻蠅蟺慰喂, 蠈渭蠅蟼, 畏 畏蟻蠅委未伪 渭伪蟼 未蔚谓 蟺蟿慰蔚委蟿伪喂 纬喂伪 蟺慰位蠉 魏伪喂 魏伪蟿伪蟽蟿蟻蠋谓蔚喂 蟿伪 伪谓喂未喂慰蟿蔚位萎 蟽蠂苇未喂伪 蟿畏蟼, 蟺慰蠀 蟺慰位位苇蟼 蠁慰蟻苇蟼 蟺畏纬伪委谓慰蠀谓 魏蠈谓蟿蟻伪 蟽蔚 伪蠀蟿蠈 蟺慰蠀 胃蔚蠅蟻蔚委蟿伪喂 位慰纬喂魏蠈, 魏伪喂 渭苇蟽伪 伪蟺蠈 伪蠀蟿维 畏 蟽蠀纬纬蟻伪蠁苇伪蟼 渭伪蟼 慰未畏纬蔚委 蟽蔚 苇谓伪 纬位蠀魏蠈蟺喂魏蟻慰 蟿伪尉委未喂 蟽蟿伪 蟺喂慰 蠈渭慰蟻蠁伪 魏伪喂 蔚蠀纬蔚谓萎 蟽蠀谓伪喂蟽胃萎渭伪蟿伪, 蟽蟿喂蟼 蟿蟻伪纬喂魏苇蟼 伪位位维 魏伪喂 蟽蟿喂蟼 蠈渭慰蟻蠁蔚蟼 蟽蟿喂纬渭苇蟼 蟿慰蠀 蟺伪蟻蔚位胃蠈谓蟿慰蟼, 蟽蟿喂蟼 蔚喂魏蠈谓蔚蟼 蟿畏蟼 螝慰蟻谓慰蠀维位畏蟼, 苇谓伪 蟿伪尉委未喂 蟺伪蟻苇伪 渭蔚 渭蔚蟻喂魏慰蠉蟼 蠀蟺苇蟻慰蠂慰蠀蟼 蠂伪蟻伪魏蟿萎蟻蔚蟼.

螠蔚 位委纬伪 位蠈纬喂伪 蟽蔚 伪蠀蟿蠈 蟿慰 尾喂尾位委慰 尾蟻萎魏伪 伪蠀蟿蠈 蟺慰蠀 味畏蟿慰蠉蟽伪 纬喂伪 谓伪 喂魏伪谓慰蟺慰喂萎蟽蠅 蟿畏 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂魏萎 未喂维胃蔚蟽畏 蟺慰蠀 渭慰蠀 蟺蟻慰魏伪位蔚委 蟿慰 蟿苇位慰蟼 蟿慰蠀 魏伪位慰魏伪喂蟻喂慰蠉, 渭委伪 蟻慰渭伪谓蟿喂魏萎 喂蟽蟿慰蟻委伪 - 萎 渭委伪 蟽蔚喂蟻维 伪蟺蠈 蟿苇蟿慰喂蔚蟼 -, 纬蟻伪渭渭苇谓畏 渭蔚 蟿慰谓 蠀蟺苇蟻慰蠂慰 蟿蟻蠈蟺慰 蟿畏蟼 Rosamunde Pilcher, 畏 慰蟺慰委伪 尉苇蟻蔚喂 谓伪 渭伪纬蔚蠉蔚喂 蟿慰谓 伪谓伪纬谓蠋蟽蟿畏, 谓伪 蟿慰谓 纬蔚渭委味蔚喂 渭蔚 蠈渭慰蟻蠁蔚蟼 蔚喂魏蠈谓蔚蟼 魏伪喂 谓伪 蟿慰蠀 未蔚委蠂谓蔚喂 蟺蠅蟼 谓伪 伪谓蟿喂渭蔚蟿蠅蟺委味蔚喂 蟿畏 味蠅萎 渭蔚 胃维蟻蟻慰蟼 魏伪喂 伪喂蟽喂慰未慰尉委伪, 蠈蟽蔚蟼 未蠀蟽魏慰位委蔚蟼 魏伪喂 谓伪 蟽蠀谓伪谓蟿维蔚喂 蟽蟿慰 未蟻蠈渭慰 蟿慰蠀.
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