Imagen del autor
57+ Obras 344 Miembros 20 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Charles Norris Williamson wrote most, if not all, of these works in partnership with his wife, Alice Muriel (nee Livingston). Charles was a motoring journalist and travel writer. Alice apparently said of him "Charlie Williamson could do anything in the world except write stories": she also said "I can't do anything else." There was obviously a synergy between them as the more successful works were joint efforts. Charles wrote some novels on his own, as did Alice after her husband's death.

Please do not combine these two authors, or either's individual author page with any joint author page.  Thank you.

Créditos de la imagen: Charles Norris Williamson

Series

Obras de C. N. Williamson

My Friend the Chauffeur (1905) 24 copias
Lady Betty Across the Water (1906) 23 copias
It Happened in Egypt (1934) 23 copias
Set in Silver (1909) 22 copias
The Princess Virginia (1907) 20 copias
The Princess Passes (1905) 14 copias
The Heather Moon (1912) 10 copias
The Shop Girl (1914) 10 copias
The guests of Hercules (1912) 8 copias
A Soldier of the Legion (1914) 8 copias
The Lion's Mouse (1918) 8 copias
The Brightener (1921) 6 copias
Lord John in New York (2012) 6 copias
The lady from the air (1923) 5 copias
The Powers and Maxine (1907) 4 copias
The Chaperon (1906) 4 copias
The Port of Adventure (1913) 4 copias
The Vanity Box (1911) 4 copias
The Great Pearl Secret (1921) 3 copias
The Lightning Conductress (1916) 3 copias
Vision House (2011) 3 copias
Black Sleeves 2 copias
Scarlet runner (1908) — Autor — 2 copias
The War Wedding 2 copias
The wedding day 2 copias
Briar-rose 1 copia
Champion 1 copia
The Demon 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Williamson, Charles Norris
Fecha de nacimiento
1859
Fecha de fallecimiento
1920-10-03
Género
male
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de fallecimiento
Combe Down, Bath, England, UK
Relaciones
Williamson, A. M. (wife)
Aviso de desambiguación
Charles Norris Williamson wrote most, if not all, of these works in partnership with his wife, Alice Muriel (nee Livingston). Charles was a motoring journalist and travel writer. Alice apparently said of him "Charlie Williamson could do anything in the world except write stories": she also said "I can't do anything else." There was obviously a synergy between them as the more successful works were joint efforts. Charles wrote some novels on his own, as did Alice after her husband's death.

Please do not combine these two authors, or either's individual author page with any joint author page.  Thank you.

Miembros

Reseñas

Though the action is uneven, the descriptions of place just glow. The characters are alive and the phrasing is sometimes superb. I googled their route and some of their stops. What a tour! Glad I went along.
 
Denunciada
2wonderY | 2 reseñas más. | Dec 27, 2023 |
This had all the elements of the normal Williamsons' book: someone is in disguise, people are taking a road-trip and waxing poetic about the sights they see, and there are a couple of sort of cartoon-y villains. But for me it somehow didn't have as much sparkle.
John Winston, a wealthy young British gentleman with an automobile, catches a couple of glimpses of Molly Randolph, an American girl who is just starting on her first-ever automobile trip, with her old maiden aunt. He falls instantly in love with her. Because she's having no end of trouble with her car and because her chauffeur is a villain, John offers himself as a chauffeur in order to get to spend more time with her. She hires him, and they proceed to drive around rural France/Spain/Italy, having various car-related mishaps along the way.
It felt like there was even more travelogue stuff in this book than in some of the others, which can make the pace pretty slow. Also, I didn't like the way that John (or "Brown" as he is called when in his chauffeur role) has to force himself to be fairly subservient to Molly and the way she talks about how it's a pity that he's a chauffeur instead of a gentleman. A hundred years ago it was considered an unchanging truth that people didn't really get to escape their social class and that you were in the circumstances in which God wanted you, and that theory pops up in many novels of the period, but in this book for some reason that viewpoint grated on my nerves a bit more.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Alishadt | 3 reseñas más. | Feb 25, 2023 |
Pleasant enough fare from the Williamsons, but I still prefer Set in Silver, as well as a couple of their others. The girl in this one is a bit too disingenuous... eight different men fall in love with her (I kid you not), most of them propose in succession during a single afternoon, and she's still quite unaware of her perfect beauty and irresistible charm! She also falls into the "trap" of immediately believing the sob story that her jealous rival feeds her towards the end. I get a little frustrated with people being dense for no other reason than to make the book last longer. Also, EIGHT MEN?!!!??? Give me a break. These kind of statistics do not make me feel like the heroine needs my sympathetic interest. She'll be fine. Perhaps this is catty of me. :P

Also, unfortunately her hero never quite feels fleshed out, he's a bit distant.

But because I'm fond of the Williamsons' awesome genre of 1900s road trip romances, and this one had its good moments, I'm still giving it three stars.

Read Set in Silver first if you've never read these authors!!!!!
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Denunciada
Alishadt | Feb 25, 2023 |
I started out this book thinking it would be a 3-star novel. I got farther into it and thought, well...4 stars. Today I finished it and just had to go with 5 stars.
Evidently this married couple, the Williamsons, wrote a whole lot of books together around the turn of the 20th century. This is the only one I've read so far, but I don't think it'll be the last. Evidently they like to write books in which: A) Lots of traveling is done, preferably by automobile (because it was the latest, coolest thing) and B) Someone is in disguise.
Both of those qualifications are met in this book. Audrie, a young woman who has just taken up a post as music teacher, owes one of her students a favor for helping her get the job.
The student, a 19-year-old girl named Ellaline, is an orphan and has never seen or communicated much with her guardian, who is just returning from some type of military post in Asia. Ellaline is prejudiced against him and has decided to elope anyway, but her fiance can't come for her right away, so in the interim, she asks Audrie (who is 21) to pose as her and keep the guardian off the track.

Audrie is expecting the guardian to be a gruff, dragon-like old man, but instead she is surprised to meet a kind, fairly normal man who is a young-looking 40. His name is Sir Lionel Pendragon.

Sir Lionel is expecting his ward to be a carbon-copy of her flirtatious, undependable mother, and he is surprised to meet Audrie (whom, of course, he thinks is Ellaline). Audrie is sweet, intelligent, and interested in the same things he is. In fact, he almost immediately views her as a friend.

Sir Lionel's home has just been damaged by a fire, so while it is being repaired, he takes Audrie, along with his sister, on an automobile trip all around England. This is where the book turns into part travelogue. I didn't mind it, and in fact found some of it intensely interesting, but it did make the book a little long.
The book is in the form of letters, mostly from Audrie to her mother, and a few from Sir Lionel to his best friend. I really liked getting to see his side of things. He was an AWESOMELY, awesomely likable character. Both he and Audrie put plenty of description in their letters, and you can tell that they are totally in love with England and all of its medieval history, legends, architecture, people, everything. They both write about it pretty reverently, which is kind of enjoyable to one who has never been and probably never will be at any of those places.

Problems arise in the form of a young man who thinks he's in love with Audrie and also fancies himself a detective. He noses out Audrie's real identity and threatens to tell Sir Lionel if Audrie doesn't invite him along on the roadtrip, AND his aunt, who is scheming to get Sir Lionel to marry her. They are the irritating characters in the book, but don't do any lasting harm at all.

Sir Lionel and Audrie have PLENTY of lovely times together and quickly become genuine friends in spite of the machinations of the villains. It's great. Their travels and touring around England are really just one long spell of courtship, even though Sir Lionel is thinking, "But I'm so much older, and I'm her guardian, and she must think of me as elderly," and Audrie is thinking, "He will really hate me when he knows I've deceived him about Ellaline." The times they get to spend together are totally appropriate for a guardian-ward relationship, but also super sweet and innocent when viewed for what they really are--a courtship.
Seriously, these are a couple of great characters. I'm impressed.
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Denunciada
Alishadt | otra reseña | Feb 25, 2023 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
57
También por
2
Miembros
344
Popularidad
#69,365
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
20
ISBNs
98

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