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Flight

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Sometimes it’s impossible to pinpoint the moment it went wrong – for Martagon, it is impossible because there were so many of these moments. He has fallen head over heels in love for the very first time, and he doesn’t know how to do it very well.

Martagon is an engineer who has made his work his entire life. He is at the forefront of his industry and his career has never been more exciting. His cutting-edge expertise with glass structures has garnered him international praise, but he is ashamed of the personal errors in judgment he has made along the way. Martagon yearns to be simply “a good person” but somehow he keeps getting in his own way.

Working on his latest challenge, a new airport in Provence, Martagon meets the love of his life – the beautiful and enigmatic Marina. Martagon’s life is thrown completely out of balance by his love for Marina, and he takes risks – both personally and professionally – to be with her.

Written with the urgency of new love, and sharp insight into the relationships between men and women, Flight is ultimately a story of loss and discovering. Of self-discovery and the need to belong. Of the risks we take and the mistakes we make for passionate love. A story of a man and a woman, and a man and his inspiration.


From the Hardcover edition.

272 pages, Paperback

First published September 24, 2002

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20 people want to read

About the author

Victoria Glendinning

44 books54 followers
British biographer, critic, broadcaster and novelist. She is President of English PEN, a winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, was awarded a CBE in 1998 and is Vice-president of the Royal Society of Literature.

Glendinning read modern languages at Oxford and worked as a teacher and social worker before becoming an editorial assistant for the Times Literary Supplement in 1974.

She has been married three times, the second to Irish writer, lawyer and editor Terence de Vere White, who died of Parkinson's disease in 1994.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Peter.
Author 5 books16 followers
December 15, 2010
Enjoyed this very much. There was just the slightest touch of Ballardian dystopia in this exploration of stress and load-bearing, transparency and motion, in buildings and people and systems. Met Victoria the other evening at dinner, and spent yesterday evening with an assembly of illustrious architects, so it all seems to fit together in an interesting way.
Profile Image for bob walenski.
710 reviews3 followers
October 30, 2015
A bit slow moving and predictable, the book was a short, easy read and had moments of insight into relationships and the way they start and inevitably end when infidelity is involved.
a good 2 day read.
Profile Image for Maslela.
393 reviews8 followers
January 3, 2026
I read The Grown-Ups over twenty years ago and remember liking it so I picked this up, also more than fifteen years ago now. A few pages in I had to look up where Glendinning's from again because I was so confused as to why it's reading like a translation rather than a British author's work.

It's too amateur, too simple, almost babyish. Gives off quite a strange vibe, with the story set in UK and people speaking English but the tone, the language, and prose as if it is crudely translated. Quite repetitive in discussing the qualities of each character but not adding anything to them.

Her non-fiction books are all very highly rated (beyond 4 stars) and she wrote biographies (one of Trollope!) so it looks like fiction is not really her forte.
Profile Image for Jayne Charles.
1,045 reviews22 followers
November 4, 2012
In a bold attempt to make civil engineering sexy, this novel has a guy called Margtagon (Martagon??? Isn’t that some kind of gas?), designer of massive glass structures, getting involved with a French redhead. Before we get to that bit, though, there is a fair amount of corporate manoeuvring to plough though, and whilst one trusts the author that this stuff will prove important later on, it does go on a bit.

We are told this book is a romance, and indeed it is, though I couldn’t figure out exactly what it was about Marina the French redhead that was so attractive (I mean, she didn’t even have nice legs). I didn’t find her at all likeable, and that was a problem. At its heart, the plot is a fairly standard one of romance gone wrong, but the setting lends it a nice feeling of originality. There is a thoughtful quality to the writing, too, and it allowed itself time and space along the way to consider such topics as the European image of the UK, and pride in being British (and whether that's embarrassing).

What was excellent was the portrayal of the building industry at its flamboyant top end. The high flyers that populate it, the macho culture, and the potential for small errors to cost millions and cause embarrassing time delays. I used to work as a surveyor and remember it well.
Profile Image for Jacqui.
12 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2010
This was an interesting book of love and loss and not knowing what you want until it's too late, the main character is very self-indulgent, a good read but not compelling.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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