Jewels
Material type:
- 9780552137454
- F/STE
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Fiction | Fiction | F/STE | Checked out | 08/05/2025 | CA00028788 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
On the eve of Sarah Whitfield's 75th birthday, she stands at the window of her chateau in France, waiting for her family to join her. Her memories take her back to the 1930s in New York, to her early marriage and subsequent shameful divorce. She is persuaded by her parents to join them on a trip abroad in the growing turmoil of pre-war Europe.
There she meets Wiliam, Duke of Whitfield. Older than Sarah, and fourteenth in line to the British throne, he sparks her intellectual curiosity and makes her laugh. They make their home in a beautiful crumbling French chateau until they are parted by the war. Afterwards they are able to return to the chateau and establish the jewel collection which leads to the House of Whitfield, jewellers to the crowned heads of all Europe. Together they produce a family of four, each of whom is drawn into the family business.
JEWELS is the story of a great house of gems, a rare family, and an extraordinary marriage. Once again, Danielle Steel explores the lives of people facing challenges we recognise as our own, against the backdrop of war, passion and international intrigue.
Rs 660/-
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
In the Steel collectionoeuvre, which means works of art, is awk with following jewel metaphor , Jewels is merely a semiprecious gem. Set in the WW II era, the novel depicts the travails of its to elim dangler heroine, Sarah, Duchess of Whitfield. The beautiful debutante daughter of a wealthy American family, Sarah has endured the disgrace attending her divorce of her caddish first husband. Eventually she marries the charming and very rich Duke of Whitfield, who buys her a chateau in France. The rest of the novel follows the self-satisfied course of their usually happy since he's in prison camp at one point union. WW II offers Steel a chance to pump drama into this bland narrative, but she misses it. Sarah spends the war comfortably ensconced on the grounds of her chateau, looked out for by a solicitious German commander so polite she doesn't guess he has fallen in love with her. Meekly, he leaves the moment Sarah learns her husband, the duke, ? has survived a Nazi prison camp. After she nurses William back to health, their idyllic marriage placidly resumes. They are rich and envied. They eat well, dress well, live well, have or else mention first child above? children and open a jewelry store for amusement. The narrative's greatest conflict comes in the final chapters, when widowed Sarah has to deal with her unruly offspring. Costume jewelry has more sparkle than this uninspired tale. Major ad/promo; Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club main selections. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
The duchess of Whitfield reflects upon her past on the occasion of her seventy-fifth birthday. She recalls her first marriage to a cad and her second and far more successful marriage to William, which brought her a chateau in France, buckets of jewels, and five children. Unlike most romance novelists, Steel spends far more time describing the birthing than the begetting. Between Sara's five children (and one miscarriage) and her offsprings' procreative experiences, the book is filled with squalling infants. There is also space devoted to the development of Whitfield's Jewels--exclusive shops that evolved from the benevolent post-World War II purchases of jewelry by the duke and duchess from locals in France who needed money to migrate or simply survive. Steel means to tell of a mother's heartache as she watches her children marry into difficult situations, but her shallow characterization leaves those interesting conflicts as unplumbed as the origin of the jewels that launch the family business. (Reviewed Apr. 1, 1992)0385304900Denise Perry DonavinKirkus Book Review
At the start, Steel seems to nick Barbara Cartland's preserves: lovely lass is wooed by English duke. But, here, the lass is a divorced American, and the duke has no wicked gleam in the eye. Once they're wed, it's Steel puff-pastry romance time. There's a stretch of true love and noble sacrifice during WW II in France, then troubles with bothersome offspring, the blossoming of a family jewelry business--and, of course, luxury digs and great duds. Sarah is in Europe--with her divorce from a playboy drunk already in the works--when she meets William, Duke of Whitfield, 14th in line to the throne. William falls in love, but how could Sarah say yes right after Edward VIII had to abdicate (in 1936) to marry a Divorced Woman, and thereby plug up William's conduit to the crown? Love wins, however, and Cousin Bertie (George VI) gives his blessing. No doubt royalty cares--it's the ex-king and his bride who get word to Sarah in her French chateau during WW II to tell her that William is missing in action. By this time Sarah has had two children, one (whom she will lose) delivered by the decent German officer in charge of requisitioning her house. The war ends. Will William return? Of course he will, and then Emanuelle, the village girl, suggests that the Whitfields help the refugees by buying their jewels. What a grand idea! Soon, though, jewels are piling up everywhere. Why not open a store! Wonderful! Eventually, the four surviving children will be involved: stuffy heir Phillip; kind Julian; headstrong Isabelle; jaunty Xavier. Except for the last, all marry disastrously, recoup, and produce kids. At the close, now-widowed Sarah beams on all at her 75th. Much of this airy nonsense is background--thin and threadbare (Steel does best on home shores). But fantasies with dukes, jewels, and French chateaux--plus the Steel name--can be counted on to shoot off the shelves. (Literary Guild Dual Selection for June)There are no comments on this title.