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Books with title The Forsyte Saga 7: Maid in Waiting

  • The Forsyte Saga 7: Maid in Waiting

    John Galsworthy

    eBook (Headline, April 26, 2012)
    This sweeping family saga now moves to the lives and loves of the Cherrells in the early 30s, cousins by marriage to the Forsytes. An old English family, their one constant in an age of change and uncertainty is their ancestral home, Condaford Grange. It is especially precious to young Elizabeth Cherrell, or 'Dinny', whose family is everything to her. And when her brother faces extradition to South America, falsely accused of murder, and her cousin is threatened by her mentally unstable husband, Dinny does everything she can to shield them from harm.
  • The Forsyte Saga: Maid in Waiting

    John Galsworthy

    Paperback (Headline Book Publishing, April 1, 2009)
    An old English family, the Cherrells' constant in an age of change and uncertainty is their ancestral home, Condaford Grange. It is especially precious to young Elizabeth Cherrell, or "Dinny," whose family is everything to her. And when her brother faces extradition to South America, falsely accused of murder, and her cousin is threatened by her mentally unstable husband, Dinny does everything she can to shield them from harm.
  • Maid in Waiting: The Forsyte Chronicles, Book 7

    John Galsworthy, David Case, Blackstone Audio, Inc.

    Audiobook (Blackstone Audio, Inc., April 23, 2007)
    Maid in Waiting is the beginning novel in the last trilogy of John Galsworthy's Forsyte Chronicles. In this seventh installment, the story continues of the lives and times, loves and losses, fortunes and deaths of the fictional but entirely representative family of propertied Victorians, the Forsytes. The Forsyte Chronicles has become established as one of the most popular and enduring works of 20th century literature, described by the New York Times as "A social satire of epic proportions and one that does not suffer by comparison with Thackeray's Vanity Fair...[a] whole comedy of manners, convincing both in its fidelity to life and as a work of art." John Galsworthy received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1932.