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Margaret Forster

    25 mai 1938 – 8 février 2016

    Margaret Forster était une romancière, biographe et critique littéraire renommée dont la prose perspicace explorait les complexités de l'expérience humaine. Son œuvre, caractérisée par une observation aiguisée et une voix narrative distinctive, offrait aux lecteurs des explorations profondes de la société et de l'individu. Les contributions de Forster à la littérature et au discours public par son écriture et sa critique ont laissé un impact durable.

    Hidden Lives
    Churchill's Grandmama
    Precious Lives
    Shadow Baby
    Diary of an ordinary woman
    Significant Sisters
    • Significant Sisters

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,0(3)Évaluer

      Traces the lives of eight women - Caroline Norton, Elizabeth Blackwell, Florence Nightingale, Emily Davies, Josephine Butler, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Margaret Sanger, Emma Goldman - each of whom pioneered vital changes in the spheres of law, education, the professions, morals or politics. All fought to make lasting difference to women's lives.

      Significant Sisters
    • On the eve of the Great War, Millicent King begins to keep her journal and records the dramas of everyday life in a family touched by war, tragedy, and money troubles. This title presents the 'edited' diary of this woman, born in 1901, whose life spans the twentieth century.

      Diary of an ordinary woman
    • Precious Lives

      • 258pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,1(152)Évaluer

      The story of the author's ninety-six-year-old father, Arthur, and her brave & witty sister-in-law, Marion, battling with cancer. Through these two lives, so closely bound with her own, the author looks with wonder at the sheer tenacity of the human spirit.

      Precious Lives
    • Churchill's Grandmama

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      2,0(1)Évaluer

      The story of a woman who helped mould the famous Winston Churchill

      Churchill's Grandmama
    • Hidden Lives

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,1(585)Évaluer

      Margaret Forster's grandmother died in 1936, taking many secrets to her grave. Where had she spent the first 23 years of her life? Who was the woman in black who paid her a visit shortly before her death? The search for answers took Margaret on a journey into her family's past. This is a memoir on how women's lives have changed over the century.

      Hidden Lives
    • A biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning written with reference to Browning correspondence only recently available, arguing that the poet was a strong, determined woman largely responsible for her own incarceration in Wimpole Street.

      Elizabeth Barrett Browning
    • My Life in Houses

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,1(72)Évaluer

      ‘I was born on 25th May, 1938, in the front bedroom of a house in Orton Road, a house on the outer edges of Raffles, a council estate. I was a lucky girl.’ So begins Margaret Forster’s journey through the houses she’s lived in, from that sparkling new council house, to her beloved London home of today. This is not a book about bricks and mortar though. This is a book about what houses are to us, the effect they have on the way we live our lives and the changing nature of our homes: from blacking grates and outside privies; to cities dominated by bedsits and lodgings; to the houses of today converted back into single dwellings. Finally, it is a gently insistent, personal inquiry into the meaning of home.

      My Life in Houses
    • Daphne du Maurier

      • 480pages
      • 17 heures de lecture
      4,0(856)Évaluer

      Rebecca , published in 1938, brought its author instant international acclaim, capturing the popular imagination with its haunting atmosphere of suspense and mystery. du Maurier was immediately established as the queen of the psychological thriller. But the more fame this and her other books encouraged, the more reclusive Daphne du Maurier became. Margaret Forster's award-winning biography could hardly be more worthy of its subject. Drawing on private letters and papers, and with the unflinching co-operation of Daphne du Maurier's family, Margaret Forster explores the secret drama of her life - the stifling relationship with her father, actor-manager Gerald du Maurier; her troubled marriage to war hero and royal aide, 'Boy' Browning; her wartime love affair; her passion for Cornwall and her deep friendships with the last of her father's actress loves, Gertrude Lawrence, and with an aristocratic American woman. Most significant of all, Margaret Forster ingeniously strips away the relaxed and charming facade to lay bare the true workings of a complex and emotional character whose passionate and often violent stories mirrored her own fantasy life more than anyone could ever have imagined.

      Daphne du Maurier
    • Have the Men Had Enough?

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,0(462)Évaluer

      What do men run away from? Not war, not physical hardship, but the day-to-day emotional demands of impossible domestic situations. That's women's work. This is a story of female courage, where black comedy turns to disturbing pathos revolving around the rights of an indomitable woman

      Have the Men Had Enough?