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Book Reviews of Crimson

Crimson
Crimson
Author: Shirley Conran
ISBN-13: 9780283991004
ISBN-10: 0283991003
Publication Date: 1992
Pages: 600
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: NY Simon & Schuster 1992.
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Crimson on + 34 more book reviews
wonderful 80's author
reviewed Crimson on + 3 more book reviews
Its been a while since I read this one. I remember it as suspenseful.
reviewed Crimson on + 61 more book reviews
no #'s on book, book club edition. From Kirkus Reviews
A wealthy romance writer, her three English granddaughters, and the dastardly lawyer who attempts to destroy them all are featured in Conran's new two-generation saga--as businesslike and unsuspenseful as Lace (1982), and as destined for mega-promotion. Elinor O'Dare suffers the disadvantage of having grown up in America, the daughter of a brutish father and his submissive wife, but she manages to make something of herself nevertheless as a WW I Red Cross nurse, the steadfast wife of an upper-class English layabout, and, finally, one of the world's most successful romance writers. Charged with raising her three granddaughters after the death of her only son, old-fashioned O'Dare leans on attorney and family friend Joe Grant for advice and emotional support. When Joe dies his son, Adam, takes over Elinor's financial affairs, and so the O'Dare clan's tragic fate is practically sealed. As Conran reveals much too early in this lengthy yarn, handsome, coldhearted Adam is a compulsive gambler with steadily mounting debts. Thus it comes as no surprise to anyone but the four O'Dare women (the granddaughters include Clare, the judgmental prude; Annabel, the beautiful airhead; and Miranda, the feisty businesswoman) that Adam soon has his hand in the till. As the O'Dares marry, separate, and reunite with an assortment of virtually interchangeable men, they blithely ignore Adam's gambling addiction--but the discovery that he's bisexual serves to remove the veil of idealism from their eyes. Adam is booted out of Miranda's and Annabel's beds; Elinor is delivered from a prison-like nursing home; and the O'Dares are rescued from--horrors!--life with only a minimal financial cushion. For their own money, readers get: the Cannes Film Festival, a palace in southern France, the New York modeling scene, swinging- Sixties London, Europe during WW I, much discussion of love and the importance of female orgasm, and an avalanche of detail on how trust funds operate.
cedarwoman avatar reviewed Crimson on + 89 more book reviews
This book was gave to me and I have not read it, and figured someone else would love to have it.
Snacker34 avatar reviewed Crimson on + 12 more book reviews
This has been on my bookshelf for a while. Nearly new... given to me; read once by the person who gave it to me.