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Gothic Romance

510 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1965

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57 people want to read

About the author

Frances Parkinson Keyes

143 books93 followers
Frances Parkinson Keyes was an American author who wrote about her life as the wife of a U.S. Senator and novels set in New England, Louisiana, and Europe. A convert to Roman Catholicism, her later works frequently featured Catholic themes and beliefs. Her last name rhymes with "skies," not "keys."

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5 stars
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4 stars
18 (39%)
3 stars
14 (30%)
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5 (10%)
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3 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Deborah Bell.
31 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2013
I loved this book when I read it as a teenager, and found myself horrified by the themes as an adult looking back, especially as of all the books I read then, this one stuck out and influenced my views of marriage, sexuality, and relationships in ways it was not equipped to do, not for the good anyway.

Here's what I wrote about it in a journal a few years ago:

"The "explorer" is a man who makes a living as an heretical archeologist hunting down ruins and then incongruously selling artifacts to collectors...or maybe it was selling books about his adventures. In any case, he was a hedonist, a dashing, exciting, romantic figure, and gone for most of the book outside of the country, much less the state. The book, abnormally for a romance, opens with the man and his to-be love getting married a week after meeting at a wedding. The beginning chapters are full of dialogue between them - actually, the majority of the book is between the man and woman, with very few exceptions - about his past sexual adventures and his opinions about marriage. He is a sexual libertine, of the opinion that a man and woman who are not otherwise attached have nothing to be ashamed of in enjoying each other sexually.

The woman, meanwhile, is a repressed Virginian belle of the highest sort. She refuses to even consider sex before marriage, and finds herself incapable of even talking about sex, until she finally (you know, after a few days, given the speediness of the courtship) admits that her mother told her horror stories about abuse and is therefore petrified of sex. The man assures her that sex is much more fun than that and proceeds to tell her that he'll never hold her down again after the first time - presumably because there's no way to show her that sex doesn't have to be scary or violent and can be quite desirable and pleasurable even for women other than physically forcing her, albeit with her consent."
Profile Image for Kani.
226 reviews
April 19, 2011
I read this because it is one of the authors I know my grandmother liked. It was written in '64 and takes place even earlier and it is a time and society I do not relate to, nor know little about. So it was interesting from a rather anthropological perspective and yet, the whole notion of a receptive woman loyally loving an absent husband (whether he's there or not!) and the whole presentation of love... well, it basically turned my stomach. As a time machine, it holds interest, but as a representation of "real life", not so much.
Profile Image for Lindsey.
125 reviews14 followers
December 14, 2020
Woman marries asshole, won’t leave asshole for man she loves because of marriage vows.
Profile Image for Judy.
3,575 reviews66 followers
April 16, 2016
My copy of this book had been my mom's and I had read it a couple of times when I was in my teens. But like other tales of romance from the '50s and early '60s, this one is about a hasty courtship, where the guy is just trying to find a compliant wife who fits his somewhat shallow list of criteria, and then the rest of the novel is about this unlikely relationship. The allure of Machu Pichu is what had captured my imagination, but there's not enough to that slice of the story to make this worth re-reading. It went on the donate pile.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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