The Lady in Red

Author:   Hallie Rubenhold
Publisher:   St. Martin's Griffin
ISBN:  

9780312624163


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   17 August 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Lady in Red


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Full Product Details

Author:   Hallie Rubenhold
Publisher:   St. Martin's Griffin
Imprint:   St. Martin's Griffin
Dimensions:   Width: 16.80cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780312624163


ISBN 10:   0312624166
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   17 August 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Hallie Rubenhold's captivating new cultural history gives an account of one of this century's strangest marital scandals, the tale of the adulterous Lady Seymour Worsley and her vengeful husband, Sir Richard Worsley. . . . Ms. Rubenhold's book brings to life the dissipated and alluring world of aristocratic Georgian England, particularly its vexed sexual morality, through the story of a marriage and its unraveling . . . an impressive feat. -- Washington Times Because the market is saturated with eighteenth-century bodice biographies, most indistinguishable from the next, [ The Lady in Red ] should come with a warning: nothing else in the genre is close to being this good. As a historian and a storyteller, Hallie Rubenhold is in a league of her own. She keeps you glued to the very last page when, exhausted, exasperated, and elated, you can at last put the book down and get yourself some sleep. --Frances Wilson, Literary Review (UK) The story of the Worsley divorce has never been revealed before, and Hallie Rubenhold tells it with panache. Her account of the elopement is gripping, but this is far more than an eighteenth-century bodice ripper. Rubenhold combines narrative skill with historical expertise, and she traces the knife edge that women walked between social success and public disgrace with subtlety and assurance. -- The Spectator (UK) [ The Lady in Red ] is told as a mystery, with Rubenhold keeping up the suspense and providing some surprises along the way. . . . In this thoughtfully crafted 'tale of sex, scandal, and divorce' she shows how Lady Worsley's sexual energies carried her through to a kind of triumph. -- The Times Literary Supplement (UK) [Rubenhold] has an eye for an antique story . . . [and] is sure footed in her research . . . Her special forte is rakes and roues: her depiction of Coxheath Camp, where the country's militias gathered for months as a glorified Home Guard, idling and fornicating, is deliciously lurid. -- The Sunday Times (UK) This is a fabulous eighteenth-century tale of sex, scandal, and divorce, and Hallie Rubenhold tells it beautifully. -- The Telegraph (UK)


&#8220;Hallie Rubenhold&#8217;s captivating new cultural history gives an account of one of this century&#8217;s strangest marital scandals, the tale of the adulterous Lady Seymour Worsley and her vengeful husband, Sir Richard Worsley. . . . Ms. Rubenhold's book brings to life the dissipated and alluring world of aristocratic Georgian England, particularly its vexed sexual morality, through the story of a marriage and its unraveling . . . an impressive feat.&#8221;&#8212; Washington Times <p>&#8220;Because the market is saturated with eighteenth-century bodice biographies, most indistinguishable from the next, [ The Lady in Red ] should come with a warning: nothing else in the genre is close to being this good. As a historian and a storyteller, Hallie Rubenhold is in a league of her own. She keeps you glued to the very last page when, exhausted, exasperated, and elated, you can at last put the book down and get yourself some sleep.&#8221;&#8212;Frances Wilson, Literary Review (UK)<p>


Hallie Rubenhold's captivating new cultural history gives an account of one of this century's strangest marital scandals, the tale of the adulterous Lady Seymour Worsley and her vengeful husband, Sir Richard Worsley. . . . Ms. Rubenhold's book brings to life the dissipated and alluring world of aristocratic Georgian England, particularly its vexed sexual morality, through the story of a marriage and its unraveling . . . an impressive feat. --Washington Times Because the market is saturated with eighteenth-century bodice biographies, most indistinguishable from the next, [The Lady in Red] should come with a warning: nothing else in the genre is close to being this good. As a historian and a storyteller, Hallie Rubenhold is in a league of her own. She keeps you glued to the very last page when, exhausted, exasperated, and elated, you can at last put the book down and get yourself some sleep. --Frances Wilson, Literary Review (UK) The story of the Worsley divorce has never been revealed before, and Hallie Rubenhold tells it with panache. Her account of the elopement is gripping, but this is far more than an eighteenth-century bodice ripper. Rubenhold combines narrative skill with historical expertise, and she traces the knife edge that women walked between social success and public disgrace with subtlety and assurance. --The Spectator (UK) [The Lady in Red] is told as a mystery, with Rubenhold keeping up the suspense and providing some surprises along the way. . . . In this thoughtfully crafted 'tale of sex, scandal, and divorce' she shows how Lady Worsley's sexual energies carried her through to a kind of triumph. --The Times Literary Supplement (UK) [Rubenhold] has an eye for an antique story . . . [and] is sure footed in her research . . . Her special forte is rakes and roues: her depiction of Coxheath Camp, where the country's militias gathered for months as a glorified Home Guard, idling and fornicating, is deliciously lurid. --The Sunday Times (UK) This is a fabulous eighteenth-century tale of sex, scandal, and divorce, and Hallie Rubenhold tells it beautifully. --The Telegraph (UK)


Author Information

Hallie Rubenhold was born in Los Angeles to a British father and an American mother. She is a young British historian and writer whose first book, The Covent Garden Ladies, created a small sensation when it was published in the UK in 2005. She lives in London.

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