Review by New York Times Review
A novel traces the progress of women in doomed love triangles across the latter half of a casually enchanted 20th century. EARLY on in "The Third Angel," Alice Hoffman's three-part tale of women falling for impossible men, a kindly doctor tells a woman whose fiancé is dying that "love has nothing to do with the here and now." A London hotel clerk later expands on this maxim, reassuring a young girl that she did no wrong in abetting an ill-starred lovers' reunion: "Love is ancient and mysterious and you can't mess with it. If you do it just backfires and you meet with disaster. That's a fact." For a lesser storyteller, inserting a novel's themes into the mouths of minor characters might prove as calamitous as meddling with love. For the prolific Hoffman, however, telling - rather than showing - readers the point has become a successful element of her modern fables, which present lessons on love, death and family matters against a backdrop of casually invoked magic, sometimes performed by nature itself. In "The Third Angel," the garden of a bereaved mother sprouts "belladonna, thorn apple, hemlock, black nightshade ... everything poisonous" - enchanted flora that recall the hedge of thorns rising from the grave of an abusive lover in Hoffman's 1995 novel, "Practical Magic." Yet although this new book revisits some of Hoffman's usual concerns - sibling relations, parental absence - it does so via a highly ambitious route. "The Third Angel" unfolds in reverse, starting in 1999 with the arrival in London of a brittle New York lawyer, Maddy Heller, for the wedding of her older (and, she believes, favored) sister, Allie. The novel then steps back to the swinging London of 1966, a magnet for bright rebels like Frieda Lewis, who has fled a father who "thought he knew what was best for everyone" in order to clean hotel rooms and write lyrics for a would-be rock star. The final section of the novel, which takes place in 1952, centers on 12-year-old Lucy Green, who finds solace after her mother's death in repeated readings of "Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl." Each story traces the progress of a doomed love triangle, and each could almost stand alone as a novella. Hoffman pulls "The Third Angel" together by adding traces of a family saga - young Lucy will become the mother of Allie and Maddy, as well as the source of a tale Allie recasts as a children's book - and by setting much of the action in the Lion Park hotel, a Knightsbridge hostelry that harbors a ghost, revealed to be "the part that had split off and been lost" from a guilt-stricken lover. Doppelgängers abound: two women preoccupied with their sisters; two mothers who lose both of their children. Maddy even buys boots - suede, expensive - that match ones Frieda stole from a rival 30 years earlier. For readers, sniffing out the parallels between the stories slightly obscures one of the pleasures of reverse narrative - its sense of inexorability, of every action tending toward a certain conclusion. Deftly and quietly, Hoffman tucks in the plot strand that ties together her tragic love stories; but following its thread isn't what keeps readers turning the pages. That honor goes to the young Frieda of the novel's middle section, in part because her brave, direct character is more appealing than insecure Maddy and sad, silent Lucy, and in part because she moves in a time and place many of us might have liked to witness - one where fans screamed to have a glimpse of John Lennon and an air of exotic possibility touched even young hotel maids, who, in their thick eyeliner and minidresses, "looked like a horde of Cleopatras when they went out en masse." Polly Morrice is a regular contributor to the Book Review.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Over the course of writing more than two dozen works of fiction, Hoffman has created her very own form, the heartbreak fairy tale. Her latest and one of her best is an exceptionally well-structured, beguiling, and affecting triptych of catastrophic love stories, each laced with patterns of three and anchored to a haunted London hotel. In the first and most contemporary tale, Maddy stays at the hotel while visiting her soon-to-be-married sister and falling for her sister's fiancé. Set in 1966, the middle tale features rebellious young Frieda, a college dropout working as a maid at the hotel who tries to rescue a junkie rock musician. Finally, the tragic story of the hotel's ghost revolves around precocious young Lucy, whose inadvertent role in a fatal love triangle wounds her very soul. A kind doctor repeats the novel's mantra when he says that we are accompanied by the Angel of Life, the Angel of Death, and the Third Angel, the one who walks among us, and, like us, needs compassion. Not only is Hoffman spellbinding in this incandescent fusion of dark romance and penetrating psychic insight, she also opens diverse and compelling worlds, dramatizes the shocks and revelations that forge the self, and reveals the necessity and toll of empathy and kindness. Hoffman has transcended her own genre.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2007 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this elegant and stunning novel, veteran heartstring-puller Hoffman (Here on Earth; Seventh Heaven) examines the lives of three women at different crossroads in their lives, tying their London-centered stories together in devastating retrospect. High powered New York attorney Maddy Heller arrives in 1999 London having had an affair with Paul, her sister Allie's fiance,; she must now cope with the impending marriage, and with Paul's terminal illness-which echoes the girls' mother's cancer during their childhood. Hoffman then shifts to heady 1966 London and to Frieda Lewis, Paul's future mother, who falls for a doomed up-and-coming songwriter knowing he will break her heart. The narrative then shifts further back, to 1952 and to Maddy and Allie's future mother, Lucy Green. A bookish 12-year-old wise beyond her years, Lucy sails with her father and stepmother from New York to London for a wedding. There, she becomes an innocent catalyst to a devastating event involving a love triangle. Hoffman interweaves the three stories, gazing unerringly into forces that cause some people to self-destruct ("There was no such thing as too much for a girl who thought she was second best") and others to find inner strength to last a lifetime. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Once again, novelist Hoffman (Skylight Confessions) weaves a mesmerizing tale of the human condition, this time examining the nature of love. Set in London, her new novel tells the story of three different women, tangentially connected. The book's first part focuses on self-absorbed Maddy Heller, who has always coveted her sister Allie's life. That obsession continues when she has an affair with Allie's terminally ill fiance, Paul. The second part travels back in time to follow Paul's mother, Frieda, as she becomes involved with an engaged and tragic rock star. The final section concerns Maddy and Allie's mother, Lucy Green, who was in the middle of a fraught love triangle many years before having the girls. Each of these women has lost her faith and each searches for the one angel on earth who can renew it for her. A solid story with a haunting plot line and interesting characters, this latest novel is sure to please Hoffman's fans and win over new readers. Recommended for all public library fiction collections.-Nanci Milone Hill, Nevins Memorial Lib., Metheun, MA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A ghost in a down-at-the-heels London hotel ties together three tragic romances in Hoffman's latest (Skylight Confessions, 2007, etc.). Though all three episodes are strongly conceived with complex characters, the connecting material includes carelessly repetitive plot devices (warring sisters, cancer-stricken mothers), highly improbable links among the major figures and a seriously overused blue heron. The "third angel" metaphor is also heavy-handed, but at least has a tangible connection to the plot. In addition to the Angel of Life and the Angel of Death, Dr. Lewis tells his daughter Frieda, there's a Third Angel, "who walked among us, who sometimes lay sick in bed, begging for human compassion." Frieda passes along this insight to Allie, who marries Frieda's dying son Paul during the summer of 1999 in the novel's first section. Though Allie's furiously jealous younger sister Maddy does everything she can to destroy the wedding--including sleeping with Paul, who's trying to convince his fiance that he doesn't deserve her--nothing can kill the love that blossoms in Allie as Paul's illness grows mortal. Section two moves back to 1966, when 19-year-old Frieda has fled her father's plans for her to become a doctor and gone to work as a maid at the Lion Park Hotel. Frieda falls in love with Jamie, the junkie rock star in Room 708, and writes him two songs: "The Third Angel" and "The Ghost of Michael Macklin." The latter is about the specter introduced in the book's opening pages, when Maddy hears shouting in Room 707 and learns that something terrible happened there in 1952. In fact, it was Maddy and Allie's mother, then 12 years old, who witnessed the incident that created the ghost, an outgrowth of yet another doomed wedding. The particulars are recounted in the closing section, which features another cluster of full-bodied characters. By now, however, the piling up of disasters and coincidences has become ridiculous. Some moving material about love and loss, swamped by authorial excess. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.