This book is short but compelling, with no definite chronology. The postcards constitute its backbone, each forming the basis for a part of Angela's experience: the retelling of a story or an adventure, a controversial opinion or a personal rant. In the absence of a printed biography by any other author, the postcards, sent by the well-travelled Angela to her friend Susannah and included in this brief peek into her life, are used throughout to reveal the many aspects of her luminous personality. Clapp also draws from a wealth of personal knowledge on Angela's beliefs and opinions, her passions and her liberal morality. Because it's written by a friend rather than an estranged biographer, it holds a touching amount of detail that cannot be found elsewhere. A look into Angela's archives and interviews can provide a greater amount of factual evidence, but it's rare to find documents that demonstrate, for instance, how her wicked sense of humour was received by her friends and relatives; how she felt about her illness and imminent death: 'she cursed her illness but took satisfaction from the fact that just before her diagnosis she'd taken out a whopping insurance policy; she "thought it very funny", Rushdie said, "that the insurance company was screwed".' Some might see the lack of precise detail and chronology as a pitfall in Susannah's writing, and in terms of concrete knowledge, it is. If you're after a dusty tome scrutinising every detail in each literary work, and highlighting every blemish, flourish and scandal in Angela's personal life, you won't find it here. This book is for those looking beyond the nitty gritty. It's brimful of integrity and genuine love for Angela as a writer and as a friend, and Susannah pays a great tribute to Carter's passion for storytelling by avoiding obvious, well-known and accessible information. She provides an intimate look not only into Angela's life and works, but also into the circles she moved through both professionally and socially, the colourful literary scene and the precarious political landscape of the late 20th Century.