
Without Consent, by Theodore Pratt (Gold Medal, 1962).


whose control of his outsize personality tempers his physical and emotional violence, and his determination to transplant Spanish and Moorish influences to Florida’s sunny shores. His architectural passions are underwritten by breakfast king [Michael] Sumner and the building of the Flamingo Club is brutally criticized by old inhabitants and visitors, but with its opening it is a mad success and Adam the only architect for all ambitious socialites. As his commissions grow, so do his enterprises, with Eve, never one to play the social game, aloof in her own interests. But a cold-blooded, hard-hearted divorcée [Mona Oakes] breaks up the marriage, runs out on Adam when the 1925 skies fall and it is Eve who holds out a promise for the future. A fitting survey of an age of unreason and blind optimism.Popular Library’s 1953 edition of The Big Bubble summed it up nicely as “a sultry novel of emotional storm in boom-town Florida …” The book sounds worth reading, if I can ever find a reasonably priced copy of the 1958 edition fronted by Maguire’s outstanding art.
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