The Other Side Of Midnight
Sidney Sheldon
An innocent American girl becomes a bewildered pawn in a game of vengeance and betrayal.
Being
somewhere in the middle of the most recent Man Booker Prize winner at
the moment and finding it decidedly uncompelling, I needed an antidote
stat. And what better than this sordid potboiler, rediscovered on my
shelves during a recent book purge? I always expect derision when I tell
people of my Sidney Sheldon love, but oddly, it never comes. At least,
not to my face. Perhaps this review will break the rule? Sheldon is a
marvelous writer. The lessons to be learned from reading him are long -
provided you're looking for a bestselling formula that set the world's
pulse racing nearly forty years ago. Punchy, spare and in no way florid,
unlike many of his contemporaries, not a page is wasted. The plot is
constantly, ingeniously furthered at a driving pace. It's very much of
its time, yet it's a time well worth visiting. 'The Other Side of
Midnight' is a jet-set sort of novel, making one think of the doomed 70s
love affairs of Taylor and Burton, Jackie and Onassis. Glamorous,
damaged types flit about the globe in search of thrills, revenge or
redemption. The central triangle of Noelle, Larry and Catherine is
riveting, especially Noelle's dizzying descent into vengeance-fueled
madness. There's one especially shattering, shocking chapter somewhere
in middle that I shan't spoil, but needless to say, four decades on, it
still packs a wallop. I doff my hat to Mr Sheldon. He was indeed a
master of his game.
The novel's character Noelle Page inspired the character of Kavya Krishna in the 2012 Bollywood flick "Hate Story".

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