Jewels | 
| Author: Danielle Steel Publisher: Dell Category: Book
List Price: $4.99 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $4.98 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 36 reviews Sales Rank: 207822
Format: Dvd-rom Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 496 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 3.9 x 1.5
ISBN: 0440243971 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780440243977 ASIN: 0440243971
Publication Date: May 29, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: A tradition of southern quality and service. All books guaranteed at the Atlanta Book Company.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review Birthdays are a time for reflection, especially for Sarah, Duchess of Whitfield, who is awaiting the arrival of her far-flung family. Years earlier, reeling from her pending divorce, Sarah Thompson is force-marched through Europe on the grand tour by her concerned parents. Disinterested in the sons, grandsons, and nephews paraded before her by well-meaning acquaintances, Sarah chances upon William Whitfield, the Duke of Whitfield, 14th in line for succession to the English throne. Disarmed by his wit and intrigued by his intellect, Sarah allows William to become her companion in London, warning him they can only be friends. Undeterred, William dismisses Sarah's protestations that her divorce makes her unsuitable to be his duchess and finally convinces Sarah to marry him. While honeymooning in France, Sarah and William happen upon Chateau de la Meuze. Enchanted, the Whitfields buy and set about restoring the estate. But World War II looms, threatening their idyllic existence. Following the birth of their first child, Phillip, William joins the RAF when England declares war on Germany. Reluctantly, he leaves Sarah and Phillip at the chateau. German troops, led by the courtly commandant Joachim von Mannheim, take possession of the chateau to establish a hospital, removing Sarah and Phillip to the caretaker's cottage. When the war ends, William, after being imprisoned for three years and barely surviving the torture that deprived him of the use of his legs, returns to his family. The Whitfields pick up threads of lives strained, but not broken, by war. Soon, they are approached by others who lost everything during the war except a few secreted heirlooms. But jewelry can't put food on the table, and the Whitfields begin purchasing jewelry to provide neighbors with much-needed cash. When William jokingly suggests opening a Paris store, a legacy is born: Whitfield's, Jewelers to the Crown. Over the next decades, which bring three more children, two more branches of Whitfields, and the death of her husband, Sarah is molded into a force to be reckoned with, capable of handling her willful children and a highly successful international business with equal aplomb. Steel paints a portrait of a family, imperfect as they may be, and the powerful matriarch who reminds them of the bond that transcends titles, money, and borders. --Alison Trinkle
Product Description On Sarah Whitfield's seventy-fifth birthday, memories take her back to New Yorkin the 1930s. To a marriage that ends after a year, leaving Sarahshattered. A trip to Europe with her parents does little toraise her spirits, until she meets William, Duke of Whitfield.In time, despite her qualms, William insists on giving up his distant right to the Britishthrone to make Sarah his dutchess and his wife.
On their honeymoon, the newlyweds buy an old French chateau, but not long after,the war begins. William joins the allied forces, leaving Sarah,their first child, an infant, and their second child on the way,in France. After the Nazi forces take over the chateau, Sarahcontinues to survive the terror and deprivation of the Occupation,unwavering in her belief that her missing-in-action husband is stillalive.
After the war, as a gesture of goodwill, the Whitfields start buyingjewels offered for sale by impoverished war survivors. With Sarah's style andkeen eye, the collection becomes the prestigious Whitfield'sjewelry store in Paris. Eventually, their jewelry business expandsto London and Rome, as their family grows. Phillip, their firstborn,is stubborn and proud; Julian, their second son, is charming andgenerous and warm; Isabelle is rebellious and willful; and Xavier,unusual and untamed, is the final unexpected gift of their love. Theyeach find their own way, but will be drawn to the great house of gems theirparents built. In Jewels, Danielle Steel takes the reader throughfive eventful decades that include war, passion, international intrigue,and the strength of family through it all.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 31 more reviews...
EPIC...EXCELLENT...HEART WRENCHING AT TIMES December 13, 2006 Superbly written over five decades of love and loss and triumph. I especially like the history of WWII era and of course the European setting. Great Read...set aside some time for this one.
Comparing The Good Life Abroad with America in the 1930s. November 20, 2006 As all of the Danielle Steel devotees know, she writes always about the rich and famous in a never-ending series of life among the wealthy, the ups and the downs. Sarah grew up in Manhattan in the 1930s and was exceptionally beautiful; like Evelyn Hazen, she was lured into a sordid marriage which she found distasteful. Unlike Evelyn, she had parents who cared enough to take her on the 'Queen Mary' to Europe to get over the embarassment and pain of lost love. Evelyn's parents had money and a big plantation just outside town, but she was left to wallow in mental turmoil and unjust treatment by the man who took advantage of her. All Knoxville men tell lies to get what they want, and go their merry way after they have hurt young girls. Evelyn lived in disgrace but after the trial of breach of promise held in Kentucky, she eventually became the assistant to the Head of the English Department who wrote t he Harbrace Handbook, used by English teachers everywhere.
Sarah met her destiny one afternoon at a luncheon a periperial member of the British monarchy and, like the King, he gave up his office to marry a divorcee from America. There is some accounting of Wallis Simpson and the similarity. Both (or should I say, all three) were scandals, but when a man loves a woman he will give up his throne to be with her in Paris. William Duke of Whitfield was much older than the lovely Sarah but he took her to France on the honeymoon (like Tom And Katie) and stumbled upon the perfect "dream house," a historic chateau which they renovated. Katie was a princess who married in an Italian castle after having her lover's baby girl. Sarah soon had a son to raise and another child on the way when the war intervened and William is forced to join the allied forces.
The Germans took over her castle and turned it into a medical facility as the Civil War did here in America, confiscating plantations, even the courthouse in downtown Knoxville for their wounded soldiers (the Union did). William has apparently been killed as Sarah is bereft with grief when he is not located; after the war, however, she finds him and brings him home to the chateau in France and nurses him back to health. They go on to have two more children.
This book encompasses fifty years and is a lot like A WOMAN OF SUBSTANCE with the matriarch calling a family gathering on her 75th birthday to decide who gets her business dealing with jewelry. Sarah and William bought the family jewels of the war survivors to sell to the crowned heads of Europe. It is the basis of commerce, to take from the poor and sell to the rich. It goes on all the time. Here where I live, there was a well-planned burglary in which the most expensive antiques, including three large heavy mirrors were stolen from the hallways on three of the eleven floors. Had the thieves been able to get into the apartments, they would have taken money, jewelry, medications to sell on the streets, and anything else they could grab and some of the old people would have been hurt. This place has bad management, and the theft did not reach the newspaper -- probably was not even reported to the police, as this is run by a "Christian" organization (more like a Hell with a monster office manager who mistreats the elderly and steals from the rent money). But Sarah lived to enjoy the fruits of her labors and had to decide who would inherit the jewels along with the family company. It is a hard decision, as Emma in Woman of Substance chose her granddaughter because of the bickering within the group-up part with dissension and finger-pointing. She had an extraordinary marriage, even though the husband was much older, as opposed to Evelyn Hazen who was afraid to marry or love any man ever again. Such is the substance of life versus fiction.
Probably my favorite Steel novel October 21, 2006 "Jewels" is a generation spanning, romance driven, nail biting (and all the other cliches) extravaganza that involves all the standard familiar tools of romance writing: the heroine stuck in a loveless marriage... the dashing gentleman (with an accent) who saves her... a war that separates them... and so on. Outward appearances would make one believe it is your old run of the mill romance novel. But Ms. Steel succeeds in creating a very likable and sympathetic heroine, as well as, a truly chivalrous and charming leading man. Though I found the story to slow a bit when the focus was placed on the children, it is not enough to cause the novel to lose momentum (or rating stars). As I said, it is one of her best and truly enjoyable!
Great detail and story lines! October 19, 2006 This is a fantastic story. Danielle Steele is an amazing writer. Not only does she incorporate so many different story lines in this book, they all flow amazingly together. I also love that it is set in different countries. I feel that sending your readers on a virtual vacation makes reading the book that much more spectacular. I too have written my novel "Fallacious" this same way, sending my readers to Greece which brought so much more excitement to the readers. Also, this book is longer than usual which also is great because when you are reading such great material, you usually say to yourself that you wish it had not ended so soon and this is exactly what Danielle has done by making this book lengthier. In other words, she gave you more bang for your buck! Read it!
Excellent October 13, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is my second fav Steel book. Beginning near the depression era and progressing throughout WWII it talks of life of an American woman living in France. It's the typical Steel story, where it goes through an entire life of the main character until her death. I love Thurston House, but this one is a close match to being #1. If you like the WWII era and add a bit of romance and overcoming tragedy throughout a lifetime, then you'll love this one.
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