SKU: 13540700262

FOWLES, John. The French Lieutenant’s Woman.

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Description

FOWLES, John. The French Lieutenant’s Woman.FOWLES, John. The French Lieutenants Woman. London: Jonathan Cape. 1969. 8vo. Original brown cloth lettered in gilt to the spine, in the dustwrapper with typography by Adrian Brewin and endpapers with a drawing by Tom Adams; pp. 445, [3]; light toning to page block, tiny nick to lower edge of one page, dustwrapper rubbed to upper spine tip and corners and lightly toned to spine; a near fine copy in a very good wrapper; inscribed by the author in black

FOWLES, John. The French Lieutenant’s Woman. London: Jonathan Cape. 1969.

8vo. Original brown cloth lettered in gilt to the spine, in the dustwrapper with typography by Adrian Brewin and endpapers with a drawing by Tom Adams; pp. 445, [3]; light toning to page block, tiny nick to lower edge of one page, dustwrapper rubbed to upper spine tip and corners and lightly toned to spine; a near fine copy in a very good wrapper; inscribed by the author in black ink to the half title.

An inscribed first edition, first printing of a Victorian novel that could only have been written in the 1960s.

In his essay “Notes on an Unfinished Novel” (Harper’s Magazine, July 1968) written, as the title suggests, while writing this novel (it was at the time only provisionally entitled The French Lieutenant's Woman), Fowles notes that he “do[esn’t] think of it as a historical novel, a genre in which I have very little interest.” The very first paragraph, however, locates the action “at Lyme Regis […] one incisively sharp and blustery morning in the late March of 1867”, exactly 100 years before Fowles was writing.

The epigraph for the first chapter is taken from Hardy’s poem “The Riddle”, and the capsule summary printed on the cover of the current paperback edition of the book reads as if it were describing a Hardy novel: “Charles Smithson, a respectable engaged man, meets Sarah Woodruff as she stands on the Cobb at Lyme Regis, staring out to sea. Charles falls in love, but Sarah is a disgraced woman, and their romance will defy all the stifling conventions of the Victorian age.” But that is where the resemblance ends; The French Lieutenant's Woman is very much a novel of 1967, where its narrator is undisguisedly located, sometimes subtly, sometimes more explicitly. In Chapter 13, we are informed that:

This story I am telling is all imagination. These characters I create never existed outside my own mind. If I have pretended until now to know my characters’ minds and innermost thoughts, it is because I am writing in (just as I have assumed some of the vocabulary and ‘voice’ of) a convention universally accepted at the time of my story: that the novelist stands next to God. He may not know all, yet he tries to pretend that he does.

Such conceits might become tiresome, but here they seem natural, the narrative unfolding with the assurance and inevitability of a nineteenth-century novel. In the Harper's essay, Fowles cites Thackeray, noting his deft use of voice, “characteristic teasing of the reader, [and] compensatory self-mocking” as precedents for his own methods (it may be the only example of Thackeray and Alain Robbe-Grillet being discussed in relation to one another).

This copy is warmly inscribed and dated by Fowles to one Pearl Goldwater, “whom the author will remember meeting”.

SKU: 2123957

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SKU: 13540700262

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Kimberly G
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
delightful read
Format: Kindle
What a delightful read. The characters are awesome, the plot was so good, I loved it. I was intrigued and it kept me wanting more. Told in multiple pov, the book sucks you in and doesn’t let go. I cannot wait to read the next book.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2025
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Kimberly B
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 4
not bad
Format: Kindle
I loved the plot of this book. The characters just didn’t have a lot of depth. The connections and “love” just weren’t communicated very well in the writing. The author didn’t write the sweet psycho trope very well at all either. Lachlan was just a mess of a character.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2023
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Carmen Alicea
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★★★★★ 5
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In Spare, Violet Fox flips the omegaverse on its head, giving us a Beta heroine determined to make her mark. Joining the Beta Trials to support her sick father, she's thrown into a pack that doesn't want her, especially the possessive Alphas. But here's the twist: their sweet Omega turns out to be her scent match. Cue the angst, forbidden tension, and a slow-burn romance that will make your heart ache in the best way. Violet Fox delivers an emotional, refreshing take on the genre, proving Betas aren't "spares." They're stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2025
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C. Hunter
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Beta, Alpha, Omega oh my!
Format: Kindle
Omegas are precious and given to Alphas & their packs... but the Betas want in too. To this end, the Beta government is rolling out its trial of assigning a Beta to each Alpha-Omega pack. But forcing a Beta into a pack where they are not wanted will not end well... Of course, no one expected the Omega to fall for the assigned Beta. Great read and cliffhanger
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Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2025
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B. Stubby
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 3
A familiar story, just with…..less.
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So, as other reviewers make clear, this is very similar to Pack Darling and The Beta. It’s much closer aligned with The Beta, in plot and maybe more like Pack Darling with characters. That being said, I don’t hate this…..but it wasn’t great either. It’s both books mentioned but just….less. Less angst, less emotion, less feeling. The plot feels very half fleshed out, and the “bad guy” feels underwhelming. I didn’t really feel any real emotions from and of the male leads, except maybe Oliver. The others fell sorta flat for me. And Mika makes herself out to be this big bad ass straight outta training and then we never see it from here again with the one fitting room incident as the exception. SPOILER: The whole, “Oh, I’m actually probably an Omega, but I don’t wanna be but I do actually wanna be but no one can ever know my secret that I do nothing to hide “ thing fell so flat. She never commutes to believing she was secretly an omega, but also mentions her “secret” a lot. It just felt so manufactured. I’m intrigued enough to read part 2 and see how the author closes everything out, but this is not one I’ll recommend or ever come back to.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2024

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