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Archive for the ‘1949 Bestselling Novels’ Category

Dinner at Antoine’s is an endlessly pleasing novel.To a murder mystery Frances Parkinson Keyes adds two love stories, a conspiracy to overthrow a Latin American government, and generous dollop of New Orleans insider tittle-tattle.

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By today’s standards, Edward Streeter’s The Father of the Bride is a quaint novel rather than a funny one. When Streeter requests the honor of your reading his novel, send your
regrets.

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Pride’s Castle is the tale of a poor boy determined to be rich and the women who love him. The ups and downs of the American economy and labor movement of the late nineteenth century form the backdrop of the story.

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Based on the true story of a privateer who became Governor of Jamaica, F. Van Wyck Mason’s novel Cutlass Empire is a swashbuckler whose swash has long since buckled.

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High Towers is a bodice-ripping historical novel about a lovely lass who becomes one of the early settlers of New Orleans. Thomas B. Costain takes his plot and characters straight from the shelf with nary a variation on the standard pot-boiler romance. The only novelty here is the historical setting.

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You won’t remember Point of No Return long, but you won’t be bored while you’re reading it. John Marquand is so skilled a writer that he makes an entertaining novel out of experiences that didn’t excite even their participants.

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The novel in sixth position on the 1949 bestseller list was Dinner at Antoine’s by Frances Parkinson Keyes, which appeared in third place in 1948.
I reviewed the book last year on this blog.
Though far from a great novel, the book is one that I’ve read several times and always found enjoyable. I think you’ll find [...]

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Rage to Live Is Rotten to Read

A Rage to Live is a senior moment in novel form. About 250 pages into the novel, John O’Hara reaches the “what was I going to do?” point. He can’t remember, but he goes on writing for another 350 pages anyway.

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Sholem Asch’s novel Mary has to follow the familiar Biblical narrative about the mother of Jesus, which doesn’t leave a lot of room for surprises. Before you open the cover, you know what’s going to happen.

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The #2 bestseller for 1949, The Big Fisherman, was #1 in1948.
For read my review of the historical-religious novel by Lloyd C. Douglas, use   the drop down menu links at the right. You will find the review under these categories:

1948 novels
religious novels
historical novels

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