Showing posts with label Novelist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Novelist. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2019

Judith Krantz, whose tales of sex and shopping sold millions, dies at 91


Judith Krantz, who almost single-handedly turned the sex-and-shopping genre of fiction into the stuff of high commerce, making her one of the world’s best-selling novelists if not one of the most critically acclaimed, died on Saturday at her home in the Bel Air section of Los Angeles. She was 91.

Her publicist, John Tellem, confirmed the death.

Though she did not publish her first book until she was 50, Krantz reigned for decades afterward as the international queen of poolside reading. Her 10 novels — beginning with “Scruples” in 1978 and ending with “The Jewels of Tessa Kent” in 1998 — have together sold more than 85 million copies in more than 50 languages.

Most became television movies or miniseries, many of which were produced by Krantz’s husband, Steve Krantz.

What drove Krantz’s books to the tops of bestseller lists time and again was a formula that she honed to glittering perfection: fevered horizontal activities combined with fevered vertical ones — the former taking place in sumptuously appointed bedrooms and five-star hotels, the latter anywhere with a cash register and astronomical price tags.

A hallmark of the formula was that it embraced sex and shopping in almost equal measure, with each recounted in modifier-laden detail.

“Recklessly she flung herself out of her clouds of chiffon plumage only to appear in her resplendent flesh, lying totally naked on a pile of horse blankets, laughing softly as she watched Stash Valensky, momentarily bewildered and taken by surprise, struggle out of his dinner jacket,” Krantz writes in her second novel, “Princess Daisy” (1980). “Soon, very soon, he was as naked as she. He savaged her abandoned flesh with an urgency, almost a cannibalism, he hadn’t known in years.”

Elements of Krantz’s formula had existed piecemeal in earlier fiction for women, conspicuously in the work of Jacqueline Susann, the author of “Valley of the Dolls” (1966) and other steamy novels of the 1960s and ’70s. But Krantz was almost certainly the first writer to combine the steam and the shopping in such opulent profusion — and to do so all the way to the bank.

In a sense, Krantz was a fantasy novelist. Her heroines — invariably rich, thin, savvy, ambitious and preternaturally beautiful — are undisputed princesses, their castles the opulent hotels, condominiums, casinos and boutiques of New York, Paris, Beverly Hills and Monte Carlo.

Her narratives are rife with sacred objects: a hurtling catalog of brand names that offers readers a Cook’s tour of high-end material culture.

A passage from “Scruples” reads: “They went to other collections, chez Saint Laurent and Lanvin and Nina Ricci and Balmain and Givenchy and Chanel, the seats less good, sometimes quite bad, for impecunious countesses are not treated with much respect in the great couture houses.”

“I’ve never written about real people,” Krantz told Town & Country magazine in 1998, adding: “In a way, I write Horatio Alger stories for women.”

CAREER WOMEN AS HEROINES

Krantz’s novels embody a sexual politics at once feminist and retrograde. Her heroines are career women striding through glamorous realms of fashion, publishing, art and retailing. They are sexually assertive, as apt to tear off a man’s bespoke silk shirt as they are to have their own bodices ripped.

Yet in book after book, the heroine’s overriding goal is to find true love with a hero who is superlatively handsome, staggeringly virile and stupendously rich.

Not surprising, Krantz’s novels took regular drubbings from reviewers. The English novelist and critic Angela Carter once likened reading them to “being sealed inside a luxury shopping mall whilst being softly pelted with scented sex technique manuals.”

To such criticisms, Krantz brought a generous dose of self-awareness.

“I write the best books that I know how; I can’t write any better than this,” she told The Los Angeles Times in 1990. “People think that because I had a good education, I’m not writing on the level that I should. They think I’m harboring some slim little intellectual volume, that I am really Isaac Bashevis Singer in disguise.”

In the end, Krantz appeared to have the last laugh. Of all the luxury brands that loom large in her books, there is none larger or more luxurious than the Judith Krantz brand itself — a brand, impeccably built, that allowed her to lead the jet-setting, Chanel-clad life of a character in a Judith Krantz novel.

FASHION

Judith Bluma-Gittel Tarcher was born in Manhattan on Jan. 9, 1928; her middle name means “lovely flower” in Yiddish. Her father, Jack, ran his own advertising agency and was later a vice president of the Madison Avenue powerhouse Doyle Dane Bernbach. Her mother, Mary (Brager) Gittel, was a lawyer who became an executive of the Legal Aid Society. Her younger brother, Jeremy, grew up to found the publishing house J.P. Tarcher, which specializes in New Age and self-help books. (She also had a sister, Mimi.)

Young Judy was reared in a Central Park West apartment awash in Renoir, Degas and Soutine and attended the private Birch Wathen School (now the Birch Wathen Lenox School) on the Upper East Side. But her mother, wanting her not to take wealth for granted, dressed her in unfashionable clothes, a condition, Krantz later said, that made her deeply unpopular at school.

“I didn’t have romantic fantasies; I had clothes fantasies,” she told Redbook magazine in 2000. “I thought that if I had absolutely perfect clothes, everyone would like me.”

After earning a bachelor’s degree in English from Wellesley in Massachusetts, Krantz worked as a fashion publicist in Paris before returning to New York. She married Steve Krantz in 1954. He would go on to produce “Fritz the Cat” (1972), the first X-rated full-length animated film, and the romantic comedy “Cooley High” (1975).

MAGAZINE WRITER

Krantz became an accessories editor at Good Housekeeping and later wrote for women’s magazines, including Cosmopolitan.

For one article for Cosmo, she was assigned to compile readers’ sex fantasies. In doing so she added a few of her own, only to be told by the magazine’s editor, Helen Gurley Brown, that her fantasies were far too racy for Cosmo to print. Years later, Krantz cheerfully repurposed them for one of her novels.

At her husband’s urging, Krantz turned her vivid imagination to fiction in the late 1970s. With the aid of a vigorous publicity campaign by a press agent she had hired, “Scruples,” issued by Crown Publishers, reached No. 1 on The New York Times Best Seller List in the summer of 1978.

By the end of 1979, the novel had sold more than 220,000 copies in hardcover and more than 3 million in paperback. That year, in a highly publicized transaction, Bantam Books bought the paperback rights to “Princess Daisy” for $3.2 million, then a record for a softcover sale.

Krantz, who moved to Southern California with her family in the early 1970s, lived for many years in an 8,000-square-foot Bel Air home that was a riot of chintz, the silver snuff boxes and 19th-century opaline glass she collected, Chanel suits — she owned at least 40 — and Hermès . (“In a changing world, for a woman who loves handbags, Hermès is a rock in a raging storm,” Krantz wrote in “Sex and Shopping: The Confessions of a Nice Jewish Girl,” her cannily titled memoir of 2000.)

Krantz is survived by her sons, Tony and Nicholas. Steve Krantz died in 2007. Her brother, Jeremy Tarcher, died in 2015.

© 2019 New York Times News Service

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Colombia features writer Garcia Marquez on banknote


BOGOTA - Colombia started circulating a new 50,000-peso banknote on Friday bearing the likeness of late Nobel-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

The light purple piece of money, worth the equivalent of $17.40, "pays honor to a person who carried Colombia's name far and wide from the middle of the last century," the head of the country's central bank, Jose Dario Uribe, said.

The banknote was launched in a ceremony in Santa Marta, a town on Colombia's Caribbean coast, close to Garcia Marquez's birthplace, that served as the setting for the writer's landmark 1967 novel "One Hundred Years of Solitude."

The first retail bank customer to receive the new bill, Jadis Saker, said "this moment will remain carved into my memory," according to the newspaper El Heraldo.

Garcia Marquez, who was born in 1927, started out as a journalist before finding fame as an author and pioneering a style called "magic realism." In 1982 he won the Nobel Prize for Literature

He died in April 2014 aged 87, in Mexico, where he lived with his wife.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Harper Lee, author of 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' dies


Harper Lee, who wrote one of America's most enduring literary classics, "To Kill a Mockingbird," about a child's view of right and wrong and waited 55 years to publish a second book with the same characters from a very different point of view, has died at the age of 89.

Mary Jackson, the city clerk in Lee's hometown of Monroeville, Alabama, confirmed to Reuters by phone that Lee had died.

For decades it was thought Lee would never follow up "To Kill a Mockingbird" and the July 2015 publication of "Go Set a Watchman" was a surprising literary event - as well as a shock for devotees of "Mockingbird."

In the first book, Atticus Finch was the adored father of the young narrator Scout and a lawyer who nobly but unsuccessfully defended a black man unjustly accused of raping a white woman. But in "Watchman," an older Atticus had racial a views that left the grown-up Scout greatly disillusioned.

Lee reportedly had written "Go Set a Watchman" first but, at the suggestion of a wise editor, set it aside to tell a tale of race in the South from the child's point of view in the 1930s. (Reporting and writing by Bill Trott; Additional reporting by Letitia Stein; Editing by Grant McCool)

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Romance novelist Jackie Collins dies at 77


LOS ANGELES -- Best-selling romance novelist Jackie Collins, whose first book was so steamy it was banned in some countries, died of breast cancer in California Saturday, her family said. She was 77.

"She lived a wonderfully full life and was adored by her family, friends and the millions of readers who she has been entertaining for over four decades," her family said in a statement, adding that she had battled breast cancer for more than six years.

"She was a true inspiration, a trailblazer for women in fiction and a creative force. She will live on through her characters but we already miss her beyond words," added the statement from her three daughters, Tracy, Tiffany, and Rory.

Her works included "The World is Full of Married Men," "Confessions of a Wild Child," "The Stud" and "Hollywood Wives." The first, released in 1968, stirred up so much outrage that it was banned from bookshelves in South Africa and Australia.

British-born Collins, who started out acting before focusing on writing, and her older sister, actress Joan Collins, famously found great success at trading on the Hollywood early-bad girl mystique they had, both on screen and off.

Jackie Collins wrote a series of novels starring main character Lucky Santangelo and many of her works found their way onto TV screens as movies or miniseries.

Joan Collins, 82, told People magazine she was "completely devastated" by the loss of her sister.

"She was my best friend," she told the publication. "I admire how she handled this. She was a wonderful, brave and a beautiful person and I love her."

People said the prolific author had been diagnosed with end-stage breast cancer six-and-a-half years ago, and "chose to keep her illness almost entirely to herself."

Joan Collins herself just learned of her sister's illness "within the last two weeks," People reported.

"She was very shocked," Jackie Collins recently told the magazine of Joan's reaction to the news. "She had no idea. But she was great. We were emotional."

Jackie Collins had lived in California for years, and was a naturalized US citizen.

Fans pay tribute

Tributes poured in as word spread of her passing.

"An amazing woman. Talented. Funny. Kind. One of my very favorite producers ever. She will be deeply missed," actress Melissa Gilbert tweeted.

TV personality Sharon Osbourne tweeted a picture of herself with Collins.


Fellow best-selling author Christopher Rice also took to Twitter: "For many readers, Jackie Collins was their first encounter with fully formed, non-self loathing gay characters."

Fans flocked to her official Facebook page in droves to express their shock and sadness.

"RIP Jackie Collins, thanks for all the great reads through the years," wrote one woman, Cheryl Englehart.

"Though I read them at an age that was probably too young, her books helped me to see that there was a larger world out there, an exciting world."

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Award-winning novelist Tessa Dare set to release 3rd book


Bestselling and award-winning historical romance novelist Tessa Dare has a dozen books under her name, many of which have earned citations and translated into several languages.

'Romancing the Duke', the first book in her latest series 'Castles Ever After', is described by Publishers Weekly as a unique twist to a fairy tale.

Book 2, 'Yes to the Marquees' was released in December and the series continues with 'When A Scot Ties The Knot' which will be out in August.

The Tessa Dare Talk and Book Signing Event will be on June 27, 3:00 PM at Powerbooks, Greenbelt 4, Makati.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Friday, June 12, 2015

Harper Lee letters flop at New York auction


NEW YORK, United States - Six letters written by US novelist Harper Lee flopped at auction Friday despite feverish interest in the publication of her second novel, set for release next month.

The typed letters sent from 1956-1961 to a close friend, New York architect Harold Caufield, shine a rare light into the personal thoughts of one of America's most reclusive but celebrated authors.

Christie's had valued the letters at $150,000 to $250,000, but there was no buyer and bidding stopped at $90,000, a spokeswoman for the auction house told AFP.

Lee's only published novel to date, the best-selling masterpiece "To Kill a Mockingbird," won the Pulitzer Prize for its tale of racial injustice in the Depression-era South.

Published in 1960, it has become standard reading in American classrooms and has been translated into more than 40 languages, as well as adapted into an Oscar-winning film starring Gregory Peck.

Lee, 89, lives as a recluse and it is exceptionally rare for her private writings to come onto the market.

Four of the letters were written before "Mockingbird" was published and detail her thoughts in caring for her adored father and the strains of life in her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama.

In 1960, she wrote in raptures about the dazzling success of her novel -- "We were surprised, stunned and dazed by the Princeton Review," she said.

In one letter from 1956, she expresses her "longing" to return to writing in New York.

"I simply can't work here. Genius overcomes all obstacles, etc., and this is no excuse," she wrote.

She also has choice words for society in Monroeville.

"Sitting and listening to people you went to school with is excruciating for an hour -- to hear the same conversation day in and day out is better than the Chinese torture method," she wrote.

"It's enough to make you give up."

HarperCollins is to publish Lee's second novel, "Go Set a Watchman," on July 14.

The book is already a best-seller at online retail giant Amazon, where the 304-page hardback is available for pre-order.

The announcement earlier this year of its release set the literary world alight and delighted Lee's millions of fans, despite sparking speculation about whether she was of sound mind.

She wrote the manuscript in the mid-1950s and it was only recently re-discovered by her lawyer.

Deaf and suffering from poor eyesight, Lee lives in a nursing home.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Mitch Albom revisits heavenly theme in new book


NEW YORK -- Best-selling novelist and popular sports journalist Mitch Albom returns to a familiar theme in his new book "The First Phone Call from Heaven," exploring what people find most meaningful in life when confronted with mortality.

His latest book of fiction follows the reaction of people from a small Michigan town claiming to receive phone calls from loved ones in heaven. Sully Harding, a town resident, is skeptical and conducts his own investigation.

Albom spoke to Reuters about the significance of the human voice, Alexander Graham Bell and religion.

Q: How did you come up with the plot?

A: About the time that I was considering starting the book, my mother suffered two very bad strokes and lost the ability to speak. She is still alive and I can go sit with her, although I am not sure whether she realizes it is me. Not hearing her voice any more is striking because the first voice you hear is that of your mother. I began to realize the preciousness of the actual sound of a person's voice.

I noticed how many people, after someone dies, will not erase phone messages because they just want to hear the voice. That became the basis for my wanting to do something with the human voice. What if you got to hear it again? What kind of comfort would just the voice be? That led me to phones.

What if someone or a bunch of people get a phone call from heaven but in a limited environment? Would anyone believe that? How would the world react? I sprang off from there.

Q: How does religion influence your fiction writing?

A: I am certainly not a religious writer and do not espouse any religious beliefs. Whenever I do write stories that nudge in the area of faith or belief I try to do so in a way that is not dogmatic or particular to any one religion. Most religions have some concept of afterlife and what happens next. Those are elements in my stories.

I often get way too much credit. I am just a storyteller. The only difference is that maybe my books have a little more hope, but I am still trying to write an entertaining story without hitting anybody over the head with a message. If I don't have good characters and interesting things happening, no one is going to finish the book.

Q: Can you discuss your research behind Alexander Graham Bell and how his story weaves into the plot?

A: I had already started writing when I began to wonder how the telephone was invented and maybe there was a paragraph I could use somewhere. As I read more about the subject, I became consumed.

The background behind the telephone is incredibly emotional and almost inspirational, and I saw enormous parallels with the story I was writing.

The phone was invented out of love to find a way for Bell's deaf wife to speak. When I read about the first phone call, it contains the sentence, 'Come here I want to see you.' The original idea behind the phone was not simply talking but bringing people together, which is one of the book's underpinnings.

Q: What would you like readers to take away from the book?

A: Human voice and contact should not be taken for granted. Make sure if given a choice, be present and with somebody. Second, if something is a miracle to you, it still is a miracle. It does not matter whether science disproves it or the whole world believes otherwise. I think little miracles happen all the time.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com