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The Realms of Gold [Paperback]

Margaret Drabble


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Product details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd; New edition edition (31 Mar 1977)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0140043608
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140043600
  • Product Dimensions: 17.3 x 11.2 x 2.5 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 870,649 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Margaret Drabble
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Product Description

Product Description

Frances Wingate is a woman much given to living in the past. As an eminent archaeologist she travels widely giving lectures on ancient history. As a woman she is eaten away with regrets that she ended her relationship with Karel - for reasons that no longer seem valid.

About the Author

Margaret Drabble was born in Sheffield, Yorkshire in 1939, and is the younger sister of A.S. Byatt. Margaret's novel THE MILLSTONE won the John Llewelyn Rhys Prize and she was granted a Society of Author's Travelling Fellowship in the mid-1960's. She received the James Tait Black and the E.M. Forster awards, and was awarded the CBE in 1980. She has three children and lives in London with her second husband, biographer Michael Holroyd. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  3 reviews
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful
A novel of travels and returns rewards intellect, emotion. 15 Dec 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This novel begins slowly, with a woman scholar in a foreign city, due to give a lecture, suffering a toothache. The pace accelerates as she returns to England, travels to a conference in Africa, then returns abruptly for a totally unpredictable family crisis. Competent, confident she settles all that can be settled, faces what cannot, and finds personal restoration in lasting love. A historian, an archeologist, and a geologist settle into their own visions of time, as the most suitable ending evolves itself. A stimulating reflection, a wonderful story, a great work of narrative control, by far my favorite Drabble of all.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Much better than expected 23 Sep 2005
By R. Silverman - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I was a bit hesitant to get into this novel -- must be my problem -- due to its being published in the late '70's, but a novel very much in the present. Sorry, but the '70's as "the present" didn't seem that charming.

But I stuck with it. First of all, Margaret Drabble's command of the English language is quite impressive. Her passion for her characters is undeniable and their passions begin to rub off on you.

I won't get into the plot -- I hate reading plots before I start a book, but I suggest you try this novel. It shows the mindset of the English as they entered the last quarter of the 20th century, and you see that the petty concerns and worries are not that much different from today. If there is a complaint, it would be that there lacks a certain immediacy in the writing; both writer and reader end up being quite a distance from the action, but the passion of the writer pulls you through in the end.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Life's rich tapestry 19 Mar 2011
By Vital Spark - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Another fine Margaret Drabble novel, though definitely not my favorite.
The first third is taken up with the anger, regret, and sadness of the main character, Frances, who is kicking herself for breaking up with Karel, the man she loves.
The middle part concerns the boredom, fear and despair of a young woman, the mother of a difficult, unhappy, teething baby, married to a nasty, narrow-minded bully of a verbally abusive husband.
The last third mainly concerns the trials and tribulations of Karel, married to a crazy woman, still desperately in love with Frances ,deeply depressed because she broke up with him, not knowing that she has sent him a postcard ,re-affirming her love,the postcard delayed because of a nine-month postal strike.(They do get back together, but not until page 344.)
Just when things seem to be looking up, one of the most sympathetic characters, takes himself into the woods with a fatal dose of sleeping pills for himself and his little baby, and commits suicide. Their bodies are discovered ten days later.
Joyce Carol Oates says The Realms of Gold is Margaret Drabble's "richest, most rewarding novel", and I believe that Margaret Drabble is incapable of writing a bad novel; however, she herself says that reading about depression is depressing,which, I'm afraid, sums up my feelings about Realms of Gold.

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