Norah Lofts (1904–1983)
Autor de The Concubine
Sobre El Autor
Celebrated novelist Norah Lofts perfected the art of bringing the past alive in her works of historical fiction. She remains one of England's most distinguished and best loved women of letters, selling more than a million books and captivating generations of readers. Lofts' first novel, "I Met a mostrar más Gypsy", won the American Booksellers' Award for 1935. In her long and prolific career, she wrote more than 60 books of nonfiction, biography and historical fiction, animating history and yet preserving historical accuracy. In works such as "Scent of Cloves" (1940), "Bless This House" (1954), and "Crown of Aloes" (1979), period detail and language are blended with a masterful storytelling technique. Lofts is also well known for biographical novels about great and fascinating women of history such as Anne Boleyn and Catherine of Aragon. In addition, Lofts has written thrillers under the pseudonym Peter Curtis and novels as Juliet Astley. Norah (Robinson) Lofts was born in Norfolk, England on August 27, 1904. She credited her history-teaching years, 1925 to 1936, for developing a sense of history which became the foundation for her writings. Married and the mother of two sons, she lived in an ancient English city, among medieval ruins, in a 250-year-old house. She died there on September 10, 1983. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Nota de desambiguación:
(eng) "Juliet Astley" and "Peter Curtis" are noms de plume of Norah Lofts.
Créditos de la imagen: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)
Series
Obras de Norah Lofts
The Suffolk Trilogy: "Knight's Acre", "Homecoming" and "Lonely Furrow" (Coronet Books) (1986) 10 copias
Great Historical Romances: The Talisman Ring + The Gambling Man + The King's Pleasure (1975) 6 copias
Norah Lofts, Suffolk House Trilogy Collection: Town House, the House at Old Vine & the House at Sunset (2011) 1 copia
Mr. Edward 1 copia
Nessuno per lei 1 copia
Il bel cavaliere: romanzo 1 copia
Haus der sieben Leben : Roman 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Ghostly Gentlewomen: Two Centuries of Spectral Stories by the Gentle Sex (1900) — Contribuidor — 23 copias
Best-in-Books Volume 33: Our Man in Havana; Heaven in Your Hand; The Three Edwards; Snoopy; And a Right Good Crew (1959) 3 copias
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Fiona / Papillon / Miss One Thousand Spring Blossoms / The King's Pleasure (1970) 2 copias
Nine Coaches Waiting / No Question of Murder / The Nan Patterson Case / Journey to Christmas / Now or Never / You’re… (1959) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
The Uncertain Element: An Anthology of Fantastic Conceptions — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Otros nombres
- Robinson, Norah(birth)
Astley, Juliet (pseudonym)
Curtis, Peter (pseudonym) - Fecha de nacimiento
- 1904
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 1983-09-10
- Lugar de sepultura
- Cremated
- Género
- female
- Nacionalidad
- Groot-Brittannië
- Lugar de nacimiento
- Shipdham, Norfolk, England, UK
- Lugar de fallecimiento
- Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England, UK
- Lugares de residencia
- Shipdam, Norfolk, Engeland
- Educación
- Norwich Teaching College
- Ocupaciones
- Onderwijzeres
Schrijfster - Biografía breve
- Norah Lofts, née Robinson, trained as a teacher, became a prolific best-selling author both in the UK and USA. She wrote over 50 books and specialized in historical fiction, although she also wrote nonfiction and short stories. Her books are compelling reading and provide a wealth of historically accurate period detail. Several of her novels were turned into films. Norah Lofts chose to issue her mystery novels under the pen name Peter Curtis because she didn't want the many readers of her popular historical fiction to expect classic Norah Lofts-style writing in them.
- Aviso de desambiguación
- "Juliet Astley" and "Peter Curtis" are noms de plume of Norah Lofts.
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Premios
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Estadísticas
- Obras
- 81
- También por
- 16
- Miembros
- 5,577
- Popularidad
- #4,452
- Valoración
- 3.7
- Reseñas
- 111
- ISBNs
- 621
- Idiomas
- 10
- Favorito
- 20
Ellie Roon is a single mother who works for a despicable pub landlord. She also lives in the pub.
Through Ellie’s daily life, the author brings to life the toil and misery of the lowest members of the working class. It’s an endless grind for small pay with little or no social life.
Much of the novel is set at the pub, with occasional wanderings off into the local area. I like this setting the best and miss it when, about halfway through the novel, the teenage Hester is compelled to leave. We see her go from place to place in England until she eventually ends up in the West Indies.
The story is set from the 1750s through to the 1770s, and while the characters are fictional, some of the events in the latter part of the book are based on real events.
The narrative is a bit slow to get going, owing to too much description and explanations instead of drama and action. I wondered for a while if I wasn’t going to enjoy it, but at length we get some character interaction, and I soon became engaged. So, don’t stop reading if you find the first few pages a bit slow – it’s well worth sticking with.
Hester is most interesting. She’s not perfect, not evil, but human with flaws and attributes, and therefore believable. She has a vengeful streak but is good at heart. She has a hard life but manages to survive many situations that would make some people emotionally crumble.
Norah Lofts was particularly good at creating believable characters. She expertly brings them all to life in this entertaining novel.
I can only fault her on two things, one of which is using too much explanation or reporting on events. She’s superb at drama and dialogue, so I can’t understand why she didn’t rely on these attributes consistently.
The other thing I didn’t like was – on three occasions, if I recall correctly – inserting historical notes in brackets, of which the fictitious ones should’ve been added at the end in an epilogue (or cut altogether), and the factual one should’ve been included at the end in an author’s note. Including this sort of thing takes the reader out of the story, destroying all feelings of escapism. When reading a chapter set around 1770, I don’t want an aside telling me that ‘In 1936, etc., etc.’
Don’t be put off by these criticisms, though, if you’re thinking of reading ‘Hester Roon’. About 90 per cent or more of this novel is brilliant.
This is the seventh novel I’ve read by Norah Lofts. After the first one, she became an author whose works I wanted to read more of. After the second, she entered my Top Ten favourite authors. By the time I’d read six, she was in my Top Three. After reading ‘Hester Roon’, she’s become my favourite author. She has a style like no one else I’ve read.
She has a way of drawing you into her stories and, at times, the writing is so absorbing, it leaves certain scenes imprinted in my mind like memories; as though I was there witnessing what her larger-than-life characters were doing.… (más)