Daphne Du Maurier

Forster Margaret

$23.30
In Stock


In Stock: 1


Cover Type: Hardcover
Book Condition: Very Good
Jacket Condition: Very Good
Publisher: Chatto And Windus
Publisher Place: London
Publisher Year: 1993
Edition: First Edition

Description: 455 pages. Book and Jacket are both in Very good condition throughout.

Publishers Description: A behind-the-scenes look at Daphne du Maurier, author of "Rebecca", "Frenchmans Creek" and "My Cousin Rachel". This biography explores, amongst other things, her stifling relationship with her father, actor-manager Gerald du Maurier, her troubled marriage and her secret wartime love affair. Industry Reviews One of those rare biographies of popular icons - in this case, the author of Rebecca - that puts truth-telling ahead of mudslinging or whitewashing. Authorized to write this life by the Du Maurier family, and drawing on hitherto unpublished letters - including a cache of previously unknown love letters between Du Maurier and actress Gertrude Lawrence - British novelist/biographer Forster (Ladys Maid, 1991; Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 1989, etc.) reveals a woman who, despite an appearance of happiness, was tortured by fears and disturbing ideas. Born into an illustrious family - her father was a noted actor-manager, her grandfather a celebrated artist and novelist - Du Maurier grew up in a lively London household where friends like J.M. Barrie and Edgar Wallace visited frequently. She was a moody, difficult child: Her mother was cold and aloof, and her father, whose closeness and attention shed enjoyed as a child, became morbidly possessive as she grew older. Stunningly beautiful yet ill-at-ease in conventional company, Du Maurier was troubled by her awareness "that there was no escape from being a girl [and that] she had forced herself to lock up in a box the boy she had at heart thought herself to be." Sexually attracted to women, she was also distinctly homophobic, a contradiction that would plague her throughout her life. Forster perceptively describes Du Mauriers affair with a lesbian French teacher; her marriage to "Boy" Browning, a famous general and subsequent member of the royal household; her relations with her three children; her great love for Gertrude Lawrence; and her writing, particularly Rebecca. Writing, it seems, not only allowed Du Maurier to be the family bread-winner but, more importantly, offered her release from her great "fear of reality." She "lived to write." Biography of the most exemplary kind, and, in its own way, as haunting an evocation of a troubled woman as Rebecca itself. (Kirkus Reviews)

ISBN: 0701136995

(208262)




Explore other books from this author!



More From This Category