{"title":"Fay Weldon","description":"","products":[{"product_id":"ela-nao-pode-ir-embora","title":"She can't leave","description":"Considered the voice of British feminist conscience in the 1960s, the controversial Fay Weldon turns her fictional machine gun on a couple torn between pursuing their own dreams and finding the perfect nanny. In SHE CAN'T GO AWAY, she creates a fable about love, marriage, family... and the importance of sumptuous lunches and good genetics. Hattie, a beautiful and wealthy literary agent, and Martyn, a journalist committed to social causes, are slightly out of sync with the arrival of their first daughter. The young mother feels overwhelmed by the household chores inherited with maternity leave and dreams of a nanny. Martyn, however, has serious ethical reservations about domestic servants. Modern medieval servants. But upon experiencing the peace and order brought by the young Polish woman Agnieszka Wyszynska, Martyn's political convictions succumb. Just as seems to be the fate of his relationship with Hattie. Especially after watching the nanny demonstrate her skills as a cook and... exotic dancer. The situation becomes more complicated when Hattie's grandmother, Frances, discovers that Agnieszka is actually Ukrainian. And an illegal immigrant. To keep her in the country, in his home, and perhaps in his bed, Martyn is willing to do anything. But what will the consequences be? A delightful story that revolves around the hardships and pleasures of the battle of the sexes. With sharp humor, witty dialogue, and sharp satire, SHE CAN'T LEAVE is a modern moral allegory. The saga of a privileged British family in the age of political correctness.","brand":"Totvsrj-record-dc","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":47175919468796,"sku":"9788501080769","price":59.9,"currency_code":"BRL","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0722\/9197\/5420\/files\/29a1d1209b918684a3f5e0c07de7d757_c443cba5-ab25-45f9-8422-c6d34f392477.jpg?v=1778313953"},{"product_id":"o-diario-da-madrasta","title":"The Stepmother's Diary","description":"Considered the voice of British feminist conscience in the 1960s, the controversial Fay Weldon, in The Stepmother's Diary, turns her fictional machine gun on the nuances of domestic life. The plot revolves around Sappho. One day, she knocks on her visibly distraught mother's door to ask her to hide her diaries. They are several notebooks, hastily gathered in a supermarket bag, in which Sappho tells the story of her marriage to Gavin. Once the diaries are handed over, she disappears into the world, and her mother, Emily, a Freudian psychoanalyst, sees no choice but to delve deeper into her beloved daughter's story. However, curiosity gives way to profound anguish as the worried mother discovers the disturbing situations her daughter has been exposed to in recent years. A young playwright, Sappho spent years living closely with the Garner family: Gavin, her attractive and devoted husband; Isolde, a renowned playwright; and Arthur and Isobel, the couple's children, then just innocent children. Isolde died a painful death when the children were still young, and years later, when Sappho and Gavin reunite and become involved, his entire family history gradually reveals itself as a burden that requires much more than goodwill to bear. With pauses for Emily's psychoanalytic analyses and the dramas of the present, the past gradually reveals a world of tragedies and pitfalls of domestic life, frightening in its complexity. And the reader is invited to immerse themselves in this breathless, fluid, and elegant narrative, which unveils at a dizzying pace the moments in the life and family of Sappho, who is suddenly forced into the old role of the hated stepmother.","brand":"Totvsrj-record-dc","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":47176803254524,"sku":"9788501087102","price":79.9,"currency_code":"BRL","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0722\/9197\/5420\/files\/520d84e58197a58be8f48a40942d7703.jpg?v=1776899838"}],"url":"https:\/\/www.record.com.br\/en\/collections\/fay-weldon.oembed","provider":"Editora Record","version":"1.0","type":"link"}