Photo de l'auteur

Tiffany Thayer (1902–1959)

Auteur de Three Musketeers

23+ oeuvres 139 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Tiffany Thayer, Tiffany Thayer's

Œuvres de Tiffany Thayer

Three Musketeers (1939) 28 exemplaires
Thirteen Men (1940) 17 exemplaires
Thirteen Women (1932) 13 exemplaires
Doctor Arnoldi (1934) 7 exemplaires
One Woman (1942) 7 exemplaires
Call Her Savage (1931) 7 exemplaires
One-man show (1943) 7 exemplaires
The Illustrious Corpse (1930) 6 exemplaires
Three-Sheet (1932) 4 exemplaires
The Greek (1931) 4 exemplaires
Little dog lost 3 exemplaires
Kings and numbers 3 exemplaires
The Cluck Abroad (1935) 2 exemplaires
Three Musketeers And A Lady (1950) 2 exemplaires
An American girl 2 exemplaires
Kedjebrevet 1 exemplaire
The Three Musketeers 1 exemplaire
Three Musketters 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Le Livre des damnés (1919) — Introduction, quelques éditions410 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Thayer, Tiffany
Nom légal
Thayer, Tiffany Ellsworth
Date de naissance
1902-03-01
Date de décès
1959-08-23
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Professions
actor
novelist
short-story writer
journal editor
Organisations
Fortean Society (founder)

Membres

Critiques

Call Her Savage has all the appearances of a pulp novel, but really is a pretty well written book. Published in 1931 (and it is worthwhile to note that Thayer is male, despite his first name), it is the story of a "willful" woman who tries to live life on her own terms without knuckling under to society's norms (and the power of men). Surprisingly, the book begins with the main character's grandparents as they came across the plains in a wagon train, and worked up through the next generation to explain the character's antecedents.

At any rate, the book is very much in the "determinist" school, wherein characters are shaped by their environment in a way that leaves them very little wriggle room, fate-wise. Sort of a Theodore Dreiser with a touch more licentiousness.

A bit predictable in parts, but over all I enjoyed the characterizations and dialogue, and the ending worked quite well, which, to be honest, I wasn't expecting. I did a bit of investigation online and was fascinated to learn that this book was made into a move starring Clara Bow as part of her ongoing efforts to make the transition of silent screen star to talkies. Bow's work was generally praised in the movie, but the film itself was panned for being over sentimental and sensationalized.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
rocketjk | Jan 6, 2009 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
23
Aussi par
1
Membres
139
Popularité
#147,351
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
1
ISBN
3

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