Ebook {Epub PDF} Rebeccas Tale by Sally Beauman






















A rather scant plot, filled in with soporific banalities. Ms. Beauman creates an outline with sparse revelations regarding Rebecca, or cryptic illusions to hint at the character of Rebecca. Then she fills in the in between parts with peripheral two-dimensional personalities/5(). Beauman expertly tells Rebecca's tale from four different perspectives Julyan's, Gray's, Ellie's and, most vividly, Rebecca's without settling which version is nearest the truth. Though a composite Rebecca emerges depressive, possibly schizophrenic, promiscuous, fearless and almost certainly "dangerous" Beauman merely hints at a biological cause, raising titillating, though fully plausible, possibilities/5(). Sally Beauman has taken Daphne du Maurier's celebrated twentieth-century classic, Rebecca, and crafted a compelling companion for the twenty-first. Haunting, evocative, mesmerising, Rebecca's Tale is for anyone who has ever dreamt of going back to Manderley again. published by bltadwin.ru in .


Rebecca's Tale Sally Beauman pp, Little, Brown, £ It is worth wondering what might have happened to Sally Beauman's subsequent career as a writer if, when she published her first novel. Rebecca's Tale [Beauman, Sally] on bltadwin.ru *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Rebecca's Tale. Rebecca's Tale by Sally Beauman, , available at Book Depository with free delivery worldwide.


Rebecca's Tale is a novel by British author Sally Beauman. The book is a sequel to the Daphne du Maurier novel Rebecca and is officially approved by the Du Maurier estate. It continues the original plot and is also roughly consistent with the sequel Mrs de Winter by Susan Hill. Beauman expertly tells Rebecca's tale from four different perspectives Julyan's, Gray's, Ellie's and, most vividly, Rebecca's without settling which version is nearest the truth. Though a composite Rebecca emerges depressive, possibly schizophrenic, promiscuous, fearless and almost certainly "dangerous" Beauman merely hints at a biological cause, raising titillating, though fully plausible, possibilities. Sally Beauman, in "Rebecca's Tale", cleverly explores many of the themes in Daphne Du Maurier’s “Rebecca”, including jealousy, powerful man/powerless woman, as well as identity, obsession, the relationship between past present, exploration of mothers and fathers – both good and bad – and how we might see someone as a Good Mother or Bad Father but have that view change if we look at it through a different lens.

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