Imagen del autor

Kathleen Winsor (1919–2003)

Autor de Forever Amber

12+ Obras 2,059 Miembros 62 Reseñas 3 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: from Lifeinlegacy.com

Obras de Kathleen Winsor

Forever Amber (1944) 1,745 copias
Forever Amber: Volume One (1962) 67 copias
Star Money (1950) 53 copias
Calais (1979) 25 copias
Robert and Arabella (1986) 23 copias
Forever Amber: Volume Two (1944) 18 copias
America, with Love (1957) 10 copias
The Lovers (1952) 9 copias
Jacintha (1984) 8 copias
2004 1 copia
Flower Amber 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Forever Amber [1947 film] (2014) — Original story — 6 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1919-10-16
Fecha de fallecimiento
2003-05-26
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Olivia, Minnesota, USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
New York, New York, USA
Lugares de residencia
Olivia, Minnesota, USA
Berkeley, California, USA
New York, New York, USA
Educación
University of California, Berkeley (1938)
Ocupaciones
columnist
receptionist
historical novelist
Relaciones
Shaw, Artie (second husband)
Biografía breve
Kathleen Winsor was born in Olivia, Minnesota and raised in Berkeley, California. She attended the University of California at Berkeley where, at age 17, she married Robert Herwig, a college football star. His senior thesis on King Charles II of England inspired her to read hundreds of books on the subject. She began writing Forever Amber, her first book, in 1940, at the age of 20, and went through numerous drafts of the manuscript. The saga of Amber St. Clare and her romantic adventures in the world of Restoration-era London was nearly 1,000 pages long when it was finally published in 1944. It was an immediate hit with the public and sold 100,000 copies in the first week. It eventually sold more than 3 million copies and was translated into 16 languages. Forever Amber was made into a film directed by Otto Preminger. The runaway bestseller made Kathleen Winsor  a wealthy celebrity. She left Herwig and married big-band leader Artie Shaw. She went on to divorce and remarry twice. Kathleen Winsor continued to write but never recaptured the popularity of her first novel.

Miembros

Reseñas

Long historical romance, not exactly comparable to GWTW but I can see why people do it. Amber is a horrid character, nothing like Scarlett. In my opinion, the book could've been made shorter by cutting some of the other characters' escapades out.
I didn't see the ending coming....and I was not happy. Someone should undertake writing a sequel to this.
 
Denunciada
kwskultety | Jul 4, 2023 |
I am always interested in how my adult self reacts differently to books than my adolescent self did. I first read this book when I was about twelve years old and I am surprised none of the adults around me prohibited it. Probably because of my own innocence, I failed to see how very jaded this character actually was. For me then, there was this marvelous love she had for this man who was always just out of reach (I would mistakenly have said through no fault of her own).

What I took away from it this time was quite different. Amber is not a lovely or likable person, and Bruce Carlton is much more callous, but for much better reason, than I had thought. There is much to be said for he never lies to her. But, like her, he is willing to take whatever he wants and damn the consequences.

Toward the end of the novel, there is a passage which says, “But it was not enough, now she had it, to make her happy.” This, I think is the true theme of this novel. Amber is never happy with anything she gets, no prestige, no material wealth, no amount of admiration, nothing is enough for her. I suspect Bruce Carlton would not be enough for her either, but the fact that she cannot have him makes him seem like the ultimate prize. She does not understand him at all, while I think he has her nailed. He knows she is not evil, but he also knows she is amoral and insatiable.

I’ve done some things I hated, but that’s over now and I’m where I want to be. I’m somebody, Almsbury! If I’d stayed in Marygreen and married some lout of a farmer and bred his brats and cooked his food and spun his linen--what would I be?

Therein lies Amber’s problem. She sees nothing of what makes a person great or even good. She has no respect for any achievement that doesn’t show itself in the form of gold and property, and she does not know what happiness is. Her greatest misfortune is the one she knows nothing of: she was born to an aristocrat. Parents who would have married and raised her in exactly the world she desires never got that opportunity because of the civil war and the rise of Cromwell. She believes herself to be common and to have risen above her beginnings. Little does she know, she has in fact sunk far below her station, even when she is the whore of the King.

Finally, this is a very interesting peek into the court of Charles II, the great fire, the plague, the troubles of the restoration, the constant wars with France and the Dutch, and the rise of English imperialism. It is a period for which I have little frame of reference, so I enjoyed the historical aspects of the novel.

It is a long read, but it has a fast pace and Amber holds your interest navigating between her husbands and her lover. The most interesting character for me is still Bruce Carlton. He is cut from a different cloth than many of the men of his time, and he is the seed that produced America. I also love the character of Almsbury, who might appear to be minor, but reflects a balance that the other characters lack: he is kind, steady and capable of actually loving Amber, had he ever been given a chance.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
mattorsara | 57 reseñas más. | Aug 11, 2022 |
Americká spisovatelka Kathleen Winsorová ve svém slavném románu Poutníci postavila proti sobě dva světy: svět finančníků a spekulantů v New Yorku na východě, a svět lidí v drsné přírodě Skalistých hor v Montaně na západě.

Na západě se odehrávají příběhy nezcivilizovaných lidí, kteří bydlí v chudých chatrčích. Muži zpravidla pracují jako zlatokopové na záborech (= označená část nalezišť) a ženy se starají o domácnost a děti. Zatímco na východě jsou muži bohatí, vydělávají miliony dolarů, jejich ženy už se nestarají o domácnost, ale chodí do divadla
, kupují si nové šaty atd. O domácnost se jim starají služky a o jejich děti chůvy.
Jsou to dva úplně jiné světy, avšak životy v nich se sobě podobají. Zažívají lásku, zklamání, nevěru, přátelství, ztráty... Jako v každém z románů této spisovatelky má i tento zajímavý a napínavý obsah.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
stpetr | 2 reseñas más. | May 25, 2022 |
A biography following a woman's life during the Restoration period, when Charles II became king of england.
Not all of the story is told from Amber's point of view there are various other characters mostly real people, some of it even from Charles II's viewpoint.
Amber is quite a dislikeable character which is a good thing as it makes her interesting, plus her personality is a creation of the times in which she lived and is necessary for her success in the male dominated time in which the story is set.
There is a BBC documentary call 'Harlots, Heroines and Housewives' talking about the various roles woman had during the Restoration and this book covers all of them.
Its a great historical/romance piece of storytelling and my score for it would be higher if it didn't feel a little disjointed in places due to the multiple points of view. I understand it was edited down from a much larger first draft.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
wreade1872 | 57 reseñas más. | Nov 28, 2021 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
12
También por
1
Miembros
2,059
Popularidad
#12,495
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
62
ISBNs
109
Idiomas
12
Favorito
3

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