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    | | |  | The High Flyer |  | List Price: $14.95 Your Price: $10.17
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| Product Info | Reviews |  | Description:
 
 "When I first saw my temporary secretary it never occurred to me to  flirt with him." The bemused confidence and upended assumption of this first  sentence from The High Flyer, by Susan Howatch, reveal a great deal about  the character who speaks it and the shape of this novel as a whole. The  narrator, Carter Graham, is a successful London lawyer, a "high flyer" whose  thoroughly secular plan for a perfect life (clothes, car, kids, etc.) is  proceeding quite punctually, thanks to her strong sense of entitlement and her  talent for social manipulation. The events that follow, however, undermine  Carter's confident assumptions regarding the inner lives of the people around  her. Carter meets and marries another high flyer, a charming business titan  named Kim. Slowly, Carter learns of Kim's involvement in the occult, his Nazi  past, and the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death of his former wife.  As the mysteries of Kim's past are revealed to Carter, Kim's personality  undergoes a deep and demonic transformation. Carter, terrified, seeks shelter at  a Christian healing center, where a cast of clerics and lay people help Carter  reconstruct a life for herself, and a theological and psychological framework  that makes some sense of the blindness and betrayal that destroyed her life with  Kim. "[C]reation's not about efficiency," explains one character, "it's about  love. It's about shedding blood, sweat and tears to make the thing you care  about come right. It's about enduring the shadow side of creation and using it  so that in the end everything can be brought into the light." The novel's  greatest strength is its suspenseful plotting, which calls to mind (thanks in  part to the narrator's frequent allusions to) the films of Alfred Hitchcock.  --Michael Joseph Gross
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