Photo de l'auteur

Catherine Gaskin (1929–2009)

Auteur de Sara Dane

42+ oeuvres 1,539 utilisateurs 19 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Catherine Gaskin

Sara Dane (1955) 184 exemplaires
A Falcon for a Queen (1972) 162 exemplaires
The Summer of the Spanish Woman (1977) 121 exemplaires
Fiona (1970) 97 exemplaires
La fille d'Anna (1975) 96 exemplaires
The Ambassador's Women (1985) 89 exemplaires
Affaires de Famille (1981) 88 exemplaires
The Property of a Gentleman (1974) 82 exemplaires
Charmed Circle (1987) 80 exemplaires
The Tilsit inheritance (1963) 77 exemplaires
Edge of Glass (1967) 76 exemplaires
Blake's Reach (1958) 68 exemplaires
Le Prix du Bonheur (1982) 65 exemplaires
I Know My Love (1962) 60 exemplaires
The File on Devlin (1965) 59 exemplaires
Corporation Wife (1960) 35 exemplaires
All Else is Folly (1951) 30 exemplaires
Daughter of the House (1955) 26 exemplaires
This other Eden (1947) 8 exemplaires
Sol ovan molnen (1988) 3 exemplaires
A governanta 1 exemplaire
The Devil in Harbour 1 exemplaire
Edhe of Glass 1 exemplaire
Der Fall Devlin (1974) 1 exemplaire
La meilleure part (1961) 1 exemplaire
Minkä elämä lupasi 1 exemplaire
With every year 1 exemplaire
O vaso partido 1 exemplaire
Die grünäugige Lady. (1900) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1988 v02 (1988) — Auteur — 33 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1929-04-02
Date de décès
2009-09-06
Sexe
female
Nationalité
UK
Ireland
Lieu de naissance
Louth, Ireland
Lieu du décès
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Lieux de résidence
Ireland (birth)
Manhattan, New York, USA
London, England, UK
Australia
Professions
romance novelist
Courte biographie
Catherine Gaskin was born in Ireland but raised in a suburb of Sydney, Australia. She wrote her first novel This Other Eden (1945) at age 15, and got it published two years later. After spending several years in London, she married an American and lived for some time in New York City. Gaskin's best known work was Sara Dane (1955), which concerns the life of an English girl sent to Australia as a convict who then successfully rebuilds her life. It sold more than 2 million copies, was translated into a number of other languages, and was made into a 1982 television miniseries. She and her husband went to live on St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands for two years before Gaskin moved to the Wicklow Hills of Ireland and took up Irish citizenship in 1967. She returned to Sydney, where she died in 2009.

Membres

Critiques

 
Signalé
BooksInMirror | 2 autres critiques | Feb 19, 2024 |
"Try it my friend-try just one day working the cane under that sun and under a whip, and you will know what a damnation slavery is. You will rise up in your thousands and demand that Parliament pass the Emancipation act-'

Fiona by Catherine Gaskin

This is one of my favorite books of all time.

It is historical fiction mixed with a bit of Gothic. Actually it is mixed with a lot of Gothic. Because of the description of the book, some people may think it’s purely a slave saga and while slavery definitely plays a role in the book, the subject matter encompasses much more than that.

This book is about Fiona, a nanny who goes to work for a family simmering with secrets. Fiona has the ability to see into the future but only partially so she can see things and see images of what will happen or what might happen, but it doesn’t ever tell the complete story. She has to put the rest together herself.

As Fiona acclimates into the household she’s pulled into the life of this family including Fergus, one of the family members with whom she falls in love. I really don’t want to say too much more as this is a hauntingly beautiful novel that it is best to go into not knowing alot about.

There are some beautiful characters in this book and as mentioned, slavery is one of the aspects of this book particularly a couple of beautiful souls who are slaves that Fiona befriends.

I should mention that this book takes place in the West Indies. The setting is absolutely beautiful and tropical. Everything about the book is lovely.

I read this book so many times it turned into a joke with my dad. I first read it in childhood and I reread it every few years.

It is a breathtakingly beautiful haunting atmospheric work of historical fiction that unfortunately has a terrible title. ( Really, does "Fiona" tell you anything?) I actually amused myself once by coming up with alternative titles for the book and I came up with "shadows of the soul" as the winning title.

I would really urge anyone who is a fan of Historical and/or Gothic fiction to check this book out. It should have far far more reviews than it does as the beauty of the book definitely rises to five stars. There is beauty, there is triumph of spirit, there is tragedy and there is joy. Read this book and love it as I do
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Thebeautifulsea | 1 autre critique | Aug 5, 2022 |
Story moved along nicely. Interesting how the 2 men both wanted the same two women. Liked how the story started with Brendan breaking the glass, the info about making glass, the way of life of old Ireland, the determination of the Lady Maude to the end, and the way the ending was a satisfying solution for all.
 
Signalé
kshydog | 1 autre critique | Dec 13, 2020 |
Edge of Glass is a romantic suspense novel written in the 1960's and also set in the 60's. Maura discovers after the death of her mother that she descends from the Sheridan dynasty, the owners of the legendary Sheridan glassworks. Her mother, Blanche, had been disowned for getting involved with someone other than the one her mother had selected and getting pregnant.Blanche had concealed all of this all of Maura's life, and naturally, she is shocked to find there is not only the historic glassworks still in production, but an ancestral home as well. She feels attracted to 2 different men that are connected to her new-found family, and those men have bad blood between them.
I am giving the book a mediocre review as I did not care for one scene where Connor (one of the men) gets angry and slams Maura's head against a doorframe. Why would she even consider getting involved with the man after that? He obviously has anger issues, and no problem with abusing a woman. I also would have preferred a different ending, where she gets her cake and eats it too-- fighting for her ancestral home that she is heir too and half ownership in the glassworks instead of just walking away from it all.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stacy_Krout | 1 autre critique | Nov 3, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
42
Aussi par
34
Membres
1,539
Popularité
#16,726
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
19
ISBN
259
Langues
9
Favoris
1

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