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Books with author Daphne du Maurier

  • Rebecca

    Daphne du Maurier

    Paperback (Avon books, Aug. 16, 1997)
    None
  • Rebecca: Complete Orginal Novel

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Hardcover (The Modern Library, March 15, 1938)
    New York: Modern Library, 1938. Hardbound, 7.25 inches tall, 357 pages. Modern Library Number 227. Working as a lady's companion, the heroine of Rebecca learns her place. Life begins to look very bleak until, on a trip to the South of France, she meets Maxim de Winter, a handsome widower whose sudden proposal of marriage takes her by surprise. She accepts, but whisked from glamorous Monte Carlo to the ominous and brooding Manderley, the new Mrs de Winter finds Max a changed man. And the memory of his dead wife Rebecca is forever kept alive by the forbidding Mrs Danvers . . .
  • The Flight of the Falcon

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Paperback (Time Warner Books Uk, March 15, 2005)
    As a young guide for Sunshine Tours, Armino Fabbio leads a pleasant, if humdrum life -- until he becomes circumstantially involved in the murder of an old peasant woman in Rome. The woman, he gradually comes to realise, was his family's beloved servant many years ago, in his native town of Ruffano. He returns to his birthplace, and once there, finds it is haunted by the phantom of his brother, Aldo, shot down in flames in '43. Over five hundred years before, the sinister Duke Claudio, known as The Falcon, lived his twisted, brutal life, preying on the people of Ruffano. But now it is the twentieth century, and the town seems to have forgotten its violent history. But have things really changed? The parallels between the past and present become ever more evident.
  • Rebecca

    Daphne Du Maurier

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 30, 2002)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. The new mistress of Manderley's Cornwall estate must constantly compete with the memory of Maxim de Winter's first wife, Rebecca.
  • The Flight of the Falcon

    Daphne du Maurier

    Hardcover (Doubleday, June 1, 1965)
    Master storyteller Daphne du Maurier, bestselling author of Rebecca, conjures a chilling tale in which the line between good and evil is blurred and suspicions run rampant. An ever-charming Italian courier, Armino Fabbio finds his life wildly shaken up when a mysterious murder compels him to return to his birthplace Ruffano to investigate the victim's identity. Haunted by its violent past and a sinister former duke known as The Falcon, his home is embroiled in scandal and unrest as justice is sought in deadly ways. At the center of the controversy is someone Armino never could have fathomed, pulling him into the heart of the conflict and revealing dark family secrets and the true selves of those closest to him.
  • Rebecca Book Club edition by du Maurier, Daphne published by Doubleday & Company

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Hardcover (published by Doubleday & Company, Aug. 16, 1938)
    Hardcover, missing jacket. 1938, First Edition, Printing.Doubleday & Company, Garden City New York. Probably B.C.E. 357 pages. sticker in flap. 8 x 5 x 1 inches . Small wear on edges spine, and ligth tanning inside. Otherwise: tight, straight, clean, very good shape. (Please see the pictures) Quick and safe shipping. M-32
  • rebecca

    daphne du maurier

    Hardcover (Doubleday, Aug. 16, 1965)
    This is Modern Library Number 227. Dust jacket art by E. McKnight Kauffer. Wine colored cloth, a little over seven inches tall, 357 pages, decorated endpapers.
  • Rebecca - The Classic Tale Of Romantic Suspense

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Paperback (Harper, Aug. 16, 2008)
    Will be shipped from US. Used books may not include companion materials, may have some shelf wear, may contain highlighting/notes, may not include CDs or access codes. 100% money back guarantee.
  • The Birds and Other Stories

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Hardcover (Easton Press, )
    None
  • REBECCA 1938 printing

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Hardcover (Doubleday, Aug. 16, 1938)
    I've always been an admirer of the first person narrative. When handled deftly, it magnifies the complex variables that comprise us all. Rebecca is a psychological treatise with a confessional tone spawned from the narrator's perception, and this is the story. That the narrator is young, inexperienced, and overwhelmed to the point of skittishness sets the dark tone of every paragraph in this cleverly paced mystery. Her vantage point is solidly built on assumption, suspicion and crippling self doubt. The plot is a simple one: the young narrator begins as a paid, personal companion to a domineering wealthy woman, who is on holiday in Monte Carlo, when fate places her in the dining room of a luxuriant hotel next to the table of the troubled widower, Max de Winter, who hails from the Cornish Coast. An awkward and unlikely alliance develops between the narrator and the worldly Max de Winter, which leads to a hasty marriage, in which the reader learns along with the narrator of de Winters' disturbing past. Set in the house and rambling coastal grounds of de Winters' stately Manderley, the narrator enters a dynamic firmly in play, whose tone was cast and exists still from the hand of Rebecca: the first Mrs. de Winter. Rebecca's shadow looms imperiously, and brings to the fore the narrator's insecurities. Having no background story on her predecessor, the inchoate narrator is tossed by the winds of assumption, half-truths and incomplete perceptions made all the more dark by the presence of Rebecca's loyal personal maid, Mrs. Danvers, whose presence lends a disquieting air, due to her supercilious knack for comparison. Rebecca is an off-kilter mystery that unfolds along the road of the search for truth regarding what, exactly, happened to Rebecca. That the narrator stays in suspense until the sinister end lures the reader through a story elegantly told in language so poetic, it is its own experience.
  • The Birds New Edition

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Paperback (Longman, )
    None
  • Rebecca

    Daphne Du Maurier

    Audio CD (Hodder & Stoughton, May 16, 2004)
    Daphne du Maurier's haunting classic, read by Emilia Fox Rebecca is widely regarded as Daphne du Maurier's finest novel. It tells the story of Manderley - an exquisite house with gardens down to the sea, its owner Max de Winter and his new young wife...and of course Rebecca.