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Louisa YoungLouisa Young
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Critical perspective  
BiographyLouisa Young is the author of a trilogy of novels: Baby Love (1997); Desiring Cairo (1999); and Tree of Pearls (2000), set mostly in Egypt. Her two non-fiction books are: A Great Task of Happiness: The Life of Kathleen Scott (1995), and The Book of the Heart (2002), a cultural and emotional history of the heart.
She also writes children's fiction with her daughter, under the name Zizou Corder. Their Lionboy novels are translated into thirty-four languages. Their latest novel is Lee Raven, Boy Thief (2008).
   
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Biography, Children, Fiction, Non-fiction     BibliographyA Great Task of Happiness: The Life of Kathleen Scott Macmillan, 1995 Baby Love Flamingo, 1997 Desiring Cairo Flamingo, 1999 Tree of Pearls Flamingo, 2000 The Book of the Heart Flamingo, 2002 Lionboy (as Zizou Corder) Puffin, 2003 Lionboy 2: The Chase (as Zizou Corder) Puffin, 2004 Lionboy: The Truth (as Zizou Corder) Puffin, 2006 Lee Raven, Boy Thief (as Zizou Corder) Puffin, 2008  
  Critical PerspectiveLouisa Young is an extremely versatile writer. She has written a trilogy of novels, a biography of her grandmother Kathleen Scott – the wife of the famous Antarctic explorer – as well as an examination of the cultural and emotional history of the heart. With her daughter, Isabel Adomakoh Young, she has also written three books for children, under the pseudonym Zizou Corder. These have proved to be extremely popular and have been widely translated.
Young’s first book, A Great Task of Happiness: The Life of Kathleen Scott was published in 1995. Although the adventurous exploits of Kathleen’s husband have given his name a great mythic resonance, his wife - a prominent sculptor - had quite an extraordinary life herself. In 1901 she studied sculpture in Paris with the great Auguste Rodin. She was able to count amongst her friends the American dancer Isadora Duncan, whose illegitimate child she delivered, and the British Prime Minister Herbert Asquith. She also knew George Bernard Shaw, TE Lawrence and the infamous lover of all things occult, Aleister Crowley, whose advances she resisted. Based on the diaries Kathleen kept for her husband to read when he returned from his doomed trip to the Antartic, and which she continued to write after his death, A Great Task of Happiness portrays Kathleen Scott as a formidable, independent spirit fascinated by art and politics.
Young’s trilogy of novels starring Evangelina Gower began in 1997 with the publication of Baby Love. This was followed by Desiring Cairo (1999) and Tree of Pearls (2000). ‘I was just a London girl,’ says Evangelina at the beginning of the first book, ‘with a part-time job and a weakness for large motorcycles and the ancient and universal roots of belly dancing.’ Her career as a belly dancer is cut short by a motorbike crash which lames her and kills her younger sister Janie. She finds herself a single parent to Lily, Janie’s daughter. When Lily’s father Jim suddenly reappears on the scene demanding custody of his daughter, Evangelina becomes embroiled in a fantastically improbable criminal saga involving louche ex-lover Harry, gentleman gangster Eddie, and Ben Cooper the bent copper. Kidnap, pornography, the history of belly dancing and how baby love is far stronger than the love for a lover, are all intertwined in a novel as exuberant, witty and headstrong as its heroine. The second and third parts of the trilogy maintain the exhilaration of the first novel but there are more moments of reflection and seriousness. They move the story on a few years, taking the characters away from Shepherd’s Bush and into Cairo and Luxor. Eddie Bates continues to be the dark shadow in Evangelina’s life, from which she must finally shake herself free. She also has to decide whether she wants to be with Sa’id, who proves to be a considerable romantic rival for Harry.
Young’s gift as a writer is to create characters you want to spend time with. Whether sexy or slimy, warm-hearted or selfish, these are fictional creations whose world it is difficult to pull yourself away from. Exciting, funny, tender and written with brio, verve and panache, Young’s trilogy is also filled with often surprisingly moving meditations on varieties on love. It is strong on capturing the beat and rhythm of place. There are occasional lapses in momentum, when the disparate strands of the stories begin to unravel, but overall, this is an effervescent series of comic thrillers reminiscent of the early novels of James Hawes.
Garan Holcombe, 2007    
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