Because you can't have depths without surfaces.
Linda Grant, thinking about clothes, books and other matters.
Pure Collection Ltd.
Net-a-porter UK

Wednesday 7 May 2008

Judith Krantz.

I am still ill, When I get better I'll be writing a piece on Judith Krantz. Share your thoughts if you have any.

4 comments:

Susan B said...

I think the only book of hers I've read was "Scruples" which I read in my early 20's. The themes of a year in France, weight loss and a newfound fashion sense were marvelous fantasies which struck a chord with my stocky, broke, sartorially challenged self. Marrying the old rich guys, not so much. One interesting thing in retrospect was how she seemed to understand and capture the cusp of the shift in upscale shopping from the more sedate "drawing room" type of setting to the more sensory "emporium" closer to what we know today.

Scary how much of that book I can remember having not read it for almost 30 years!

Anonymous said...

I too was struck by the year in France, the newfound fashion sense and weight loss in Scruples. I went through a phase of reading a few of her books when I was in my early teens (was a bit of an eye-opener...). I loved the madness of them and the way the women were so successful. I still remember the female heroine in whichever one is about magazines screaming about how all the women's mags were about guilt, guilt, GUILT.

I think my young self mostly loved the fantasy glamour (small town hick at the time) and the highly successful women who yes, married rich guys, but also were successful in their own right.

woodscolt said...

I read most of them when I was a teenager. I really think the women were more powerful than most women in trashy fiction, and that made them such satisfying trashy fantasies. And you always had the sense that even if they hadn't found the guy at the end they'd have been perfectly all right; that they had magazines/designer stores/vineyeards/whatever to run and basically LIFE to be getting on with.

Oh, and the sex was also the raciest thing I'd ever seen in the world! with lots of gays and lesbians and all sorts of unusual practices. Scruples introduced me to the concept of a glory hole when I was, I think, 12...

Anonymous said...

Oh yes! My gran gave me a copy of Princess Daisy when I was about 11 - she obviously hadn't read it herself as the sex scenes were astonishing. I soon raced through Scruples and Mistral's Daughter at our local library. Her descriptions of the glamour and the clothes were fantastic. Along with A Woman of Substance, they made sure I spent my early teens longing to be a ball-breaking business woman and own a chain of shops.