A True DOWNTON ABBEY Readalike
“For fans of Downton Abbey” has become one of the most used phrases in promotional copy. As the NYT Book Review asks,
Is it possible nowadays for otherwise intelligent Americans to reflect on England without thinking first of Downton Abbey? To put it another way: Can beleaguered American publishers expect to sell any English author without promising — however absurdly — a tie-in with Julian Fellowes’s opulent confection?
That’s the opening line for the review of the original trade paperback, The Secret Rooms, (Penguin; Thorndike) which goes on to say, “in the case of Catherine Bailey’s stylish new book about one of England’s grandest dynasties, the link proves apt.”
The book, a December LibraryReads pick, was also also featured in the Daily Candy (although with the British cover), which, of course, made the requisite reference, “If you add a dash of the macabre and a hefty serving of intrigue to Downton Abbey, you get Catherine Bailey’s latest, a true story about a creepy castle and a duke whose private space was sealed in 1940 and reopened only in 1999.”
We hear it will appear at #20 on the upcoming NYT Paperback Nonfiction best seller list.