Therese Fowler Bücher







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A Well-Behaved Woman: A Novel of the Vanderbilts
- 646 Seiten
- 23 Lesestunden
New York Times Bestselling AuthorA riveting novel of iron-willed Alva Vanderbilt and her family in Gilded-Age New York. With a nod to Jane Austen and Edith Wharton, Fowler paints a world of enormous wealth and desperate poverty, social ambition and social scorn, friendship and betrayal, and a remarkable woman.
What if the only person who could help was the one whose heart you'd broken? A captivating and heartrending novel of lost love, family secrets and betrayal from a major new talent. 'Memories are like spinning blades; dangerous at close range.' Meg Powell and Carson McKay were soulmates. Until Meg inexplicably walked away and straight into the arms of another man. While Meg set about building a career and a family - and trying her best to forget Carson - he poured his soul into the music that was to make him an international superstar. Now, twenty years later, Meg is forced to confront the past and hidden truths in the pages of her late mother's diaries - little knowing that her teenaged daughter Savannah is playing with fire, creating a secret life on the internet that sucks her into a dangerous world. Then Carson arrives back in town - just as Meg finds out startling news which will change her life for ever.
A Well-Behaved Woman
- 400 Seiten
- 14 Lesestunden
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER 'A glittering depiction of a woman ahead of her time who absolutely refused to be second best' Red Alva Smith, her Southern family destitute after the Civil War, marries into one of America's great Gilded Age dynasties: the newly wealthy but socially shunned Vanderbilts. Ignored by New York's old-money circles and determined to win respect, she designs and builds nine mansions, hosts grand balls, and arranges for her daughter to marry a duke. But Alva also defies convention for women of the time, asserting power within her marriage and becoming a leader in the women's suffrage movement. With a nod to Jane Austen and Edith Wharton, bestselling author Therese Anne Fowler paints a glittering world of enormous wealth contrasted with desperate poverty, of social ambition and social scorn, of friendship and betrayal, and an unforgettable story of a remarkable woman. 'A very lively read' Independent 'A pacy, elegant novel' Mail on Sunday 'Wholly absorbing' Stylist 'Like Gossip Girl minus more than a century' The Skimm 'Enthralling' Good Housekeeping ----------------------------------- *PRAISE FOR Z: A NOVEL OF ZELDA FITZGERALD, A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER* 'Brilliant. Read it, read it, read it' Daily Mail 'Superb' Independent on Sunday 'Utterly compulsive reading' Stylist 'A treat' Sunday Times
The envy of women across the country, successful and wealthy talk-show host Blue Reynolds is secretly lonely, but when an unexpected reunion with the love of her life, Mitch, gives Blue the opportunity to redeem her past, she seizes her chance at love.
Marti Geller is going to die soon, and she's hoping to take her secrets with her. To do this, Marti has stipulated in her will that the family's summer home on Mount Desert Island, Maine, must be sold as soon as possible. This request comes as a shock to her three daughters, a trio of strong-minded women who are each hiding a secret of their own. For the eldest daughter, Beck, the Maine cottage is essential to her secret wish to write a novel, and selling is the last thing she wants to do. But recently divorced Claire is privately too preoccupied with an unrequited love to be concerned about the sale, while the youngest daughter, Sophie, would never admit to her sisters that she desperately needs the sale in order to survive. While the sisters argue over the fate of their late mother's property, enigmatic southerner C.J. Reynolds, with his own troubled past, is released from prison and begins to travel to Mount Desert Island. As this seemingly unconnected group all head for the coast of Maine, nothing is as it seems. And everything is about to change...
Mecenáška, vizionářka, bojovnice za ženská práva, a především sebevědomá žena, která se nenechala svázat konvencemi. To byla Alva, žena, která založila mimo jiné Metropolitní operu a požádala o rozvod, když odhalila manželovu nevěru. To vše na pozadí bouřlivě se rozvíjejícího New Yorku během tzv. Pozlaceného věku přelomu 19. a 20. století.
Alva Smithová a její sestry přicházejí na konci 19. století do New Yorku s jediným majetkem – dobrým jménem. Seznámí se s Williamem Vanderbiltem, z jehož rodiny pochází velké jmění, avšak newyorská smetánka je mezi zbohatlíky nepřijímá. Alva se za něj provdá s cílem zajistit rodině prestiž. Svůj cíl splní, když dostane Vanderbiltovy mezi „horních 400“ a dokonce překoná paní Astorovou, královnu společnosti. S pomocí rodinného jmění se zasazuje o výstavbu významných budov v New Yorku a Newportu, a zakládá Metropolitní operu poté, co jí je upřeno pronajmout si lóži v Akademii umění. Rodinný život Alvy a Williama však není tak zářivý. Po zjištění manželovy nevěry s její nejlepší přítelkyní se rozhodne pro radikální krok a požádá o rozvod, což je v té době šokující a riskantní rozhodnutí. Alva nakonec vychází z této bitvy vítězně a znovu se vdává za Olivera Belmonta, přítele svého bývalého manžela. Její inteligence a odhodlání ji vedou k aktivnímu zapojení do hnutí sufražetek, kde se zasazuje o volební právo žen. Příběh zachycuje nejen výjimečnou ženu, ale i energii New Yorku a Paříže během Pozlaceného věku, ukazuje, jak se Alva nenechala utlačovat dobou, ale raději ji měnila.