I have been buying books for the last year from a used-books seller, and I had passed it over on several occasions before I finally decided to buy it over the summer. Then I put off reading it for a couple of months before finally starting last month. And it was definitely worth the wait!
"Sweet Revenge" gave me a glimpse into the life of an aspect of Muslim culture that I've heard a bit of but never have really understood. Phoebe Spring,an American actress at the height of her fame, becomes enamored with, then marries, King Abdu of Jaquir, a fictitious country in the Muslim world in the Middle East.Little does she know what she is in for when she moves there.
Phoebe is one of several wives of the king. When she becomes pregnant, he is over the moon, however when she bears him a daughter,Adrianne, rather than a son and then soon discovers she can bear no more children, she is treated like an outcast in the palace and in the harem (a place in the palace where the wives and children of the king usually socialise). Phoebe then falls into a deep depression because apart from the rejection of herself and her daughter by her husband,she has lost her independence as a woman as well as her dignity, with repeated episodes of rape. She secretly takes drugs,which she obtains illegally,to get through each day.
One day, the King announces to Phoebe that he is going to Paris and he would like her to accompany him, for the sake of public appearances, which of course they both know as the reason. She pleads with him to have their daughter come too. Little does he know that Phoebe has come up with a plan...to leave him and Jaquir forever.
Upon arrival in Paris, Phoebe sends her good friend, Celeste in New York, a telegram desperately asking for help in the form of two tickets to the city. The next day, while out in Paris with Adrianne,they manage to flee their guards among a throng of Parisians and tourists, catching a cab to Charles de Gaulle,getting the plane tickets from an attendant, then boarding a plane to New York.Initially, I thought that this daring escape could have cost them their lives, and really it could have. Once in New York, Phoebe files for divorce.
Back in America, Phoebe thought she could have picked up where she had left off in her career,but the road is a lot more difficult than she imagined. Her comeback was never meant to be--she had to settle for bit crappy parts in films and even went as far as posing nude, trying to reclaim her glory days. And Phoebe never got better. She eventually succumbed to her demons,as Adrianne was trying all that she could to bring her mother back to whom she used to be: a wholesome and happy woman.This is when Adrianne decides she wants revenge, and she wants it bad.
At age 25, Adrianne is a master thief, stealing jewels to benefit causes she believes in.She started at age sixteen, as a means of covering payments for her mother's treatments in and out of rehab. She would moonlight as "Rose Shadow" better known as The Shadow,to cover her tracks as a thief and be presented as a rich, spoiled socialite in the media. On a trip to London for a heist of a coveted gem from a certain Madame, she crosses paths with a man who will change her life forever, Phillip Chamberlain, also a master of theft. Immediately, Adrianne catches his eye, not only beacause of her exotic looks but also because he suspects what she is doing. During her London stay, he follows her and his suspicions are confirmed. He eventually woos her at a party there,and oh my, their chemistry is intense! Adrianne tries with all her might to deny it, and him, but eventually realises that it is all too much to ignore!
I don't want to give anything else away,but the story gets more interesting from there!
Nora Roberts' books I don't often read, but this is by far the best of hers that I have ever read!