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First published in 1958 and then turned into a film of the same name in 1959 featuring Troy Donahue, Sandra Dee, Dorothy McGuire and Richard Egan, this classic romance is available for the first time in ebook format.Ken and Sylvia met twice at the Summer Place.The first summer they were in their teens. Their intimacy was without love. They'd met too early.The second summer they shouldn't have fallen in love...and did. They were in their thirties-married-each with children. Had they met too late?Ken and Sylvia decided to break two marriages to make the one they wanted together.They almost broke…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
First published in 1958 and then turned into a film of the same name in 1959 featuring Troy Donahue, Sandra Dee, Dorothy McGuire and Richard Egan, this classic romance is available for the first time in ebook format.Ken and Sylvia met twice at the Summer Place.The first summer they were in their teens. Their intimacy was without love. They'd met too early.The second summer they shouldn't have fallen in love...and did. They were in their thirties-married-each with children. Had they met too late?Ken and Sylvia decided to break two marriages to make the one they wanted together.They almost broke a third that hadn't even started yet. Because Ken's daughter and Sylvia's son met at the Summer Place. They were in their teens. For them, it was neither too early nor too late.This novel is about how marriages are made on earth-and unmade. It is about the price people pay for changing their minds about love.
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Autorenporträt
On May 8, 1920, American author Sloan Wilson was born in Norwalk, Connecticut. Readers know Wilson best for his 1955 book The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. The novel, set in Westport, Connecticut, examines the life of a returning World War II veteran in post-war suburbia and his subsequent angst-ridden struggle to maintain his family's upper-middle-class lifestyle. Many consider the book iconic in its encapsulation of the cultural tensions of 1950s America--collectivism versus individualism.Married at 18, Sloan graduated Harvard University in 1942 and immediately signed on to the Coast Guard during World War II, serving in both the North Atlantic and the South Pacific. At the end of the war he returned home to follow his dream of establishing a writing career while working as a cub reporter for the Rhode Island Bulletin and Journal. He eventually moved on to Time magazine in New York where he became connected to the National Citizens Commission for the Public Schools, serving on their staff for three years in Washington, DC. Wilson then pursued a career as an assistant professor of English at the University of Buffalo. He subsequently left academia to work as the Director of the 1955 White House Conference on Education, the editor of Parents magazine and eventually the education editor of the New York Herald-Tribune. Wilson used his position at the Herald-Tribune to address topics he felt deeply passionate about, calling for financial support of public education and examining the ramifications of school segregation and integration.Sloan Wilson wrote poetry and fiction throughout much of his life, but it was the success of The Man in Gray Flannel Suit in 1955, and then the hit of the Hollywood movie starring Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones in 1956, that helped him become a full-time novelist. The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit became part of the American lexicon in its representation of the soulless corporate man.