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Londoners Tom and Octavia Fleming seem to have the perfect power marriage: high profile and mutually supportive, both professionally and personally. They are attractive and rich, and each runs a successful business. They have three lovely children and a calendar brimming with glamorous social events. But when Octavia discovers Tom is having an affair, and that it is by no means his first, every single aspect of her marriage and her life threatens to disintegrate. And this is no ordinary affair--it is one that snowballs into terror that no one in the Flemings' charmed circle can escape.
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1
Almost a Crime
January 25, 2007, Headline Review
Paperback
- Export Ed edition
0755333217 9780755333219
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2
Almost a Crime
October 30, 2007, Overlook TP
Paperback
in English
- Reprint edition
1585679437 9781585679430
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5
Almost A Crime
1999, Book Club Associates, Orion Publishing Group, Limited
Hardcover
0752814486 9780752814483
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6
Almost a Crime
August 1, 1999, Orion, Orion Publishing Group, Limited
Paperback
- New Ed edition
0752825062 9780752825069
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Octavia Fleming is the kind of fashionable, well-connected working mother who manages both to enrich her power marriage with social contacts and to return home intact to tuck in her school-age twins and her baby. “Combine and Rule” is how the glossies treat the Flemings’ marriage, although Octavia finds her professional integrity in danger of compromise when public-affairs consultant Tom Fleming suggests she throw her sensitive charity know-how into helping a developer construct a community center. Meanwhile, Octavia’s businessman father, Felix Miller, detests Tom for taking his only daughter away from him (her mother died in childbirth), but tosses the son-in-law business from time to time; aging Felix has a longtime society live-in girlfriend, Marianne, who has to shuffle two teenaged daughters, Romilly and Zoë, as well as appease her temperamental lover. There is a cast of thousands in this busy, tedious novel, and once Octavia finds evidence of Tom’s affair, she reveals as much to her father. Plus, she has to deal with the news that the mother of her best friend from college, Louise, is sick with cancer, while Tom seems to be pounding away at easing a proposed merger of charming player Nico Cadogan’s financial group. Even politicians make a timely cameo here, in the form of Gabriel Bingham, a Labour leader who is also extremely attracted to the bereft Octavia. Yet Octavia simply can’t resist loving her sexy husband. As for the prospect of being a stay-at-home mom: It would have left the restless, questing, ambitious Octavia “bored, depressed, and therefore, and inevitably, a bad mother.” (Kirkus Reviews)





