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The Mannings

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A bold, passionate bestseller, the sweeping novel of a power driven American tycoon and three generations of his vast empire.

800 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1973

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About the author

Fred Mustard Stewart

18 books29 followers
American popular novelist, several of whose books were filmed.

Stewart came to be best known for his intercontinental sagas. Year in, year out, the 600-page mark didn't daunt him, a far cry as this was from early hopes as life as a concert pianist, something which had inspired his 1st novel The Mephisto Waltz (1968) which also began his lucrative connection with the film industry. Born in Anderson, IN, he was the son of a banker &, after the Lawrenceville school, near Princeton, NJ, he studied history at Princeton University & later piano at the Juilliard School in Manhattan. By the 1960s, he realised he wasn't going to succeed as a pianist & with marriage to a literary agent, Joan Richardson, in 1967, he began to write, & found immediate success with The Mephisto Waltz.

With The Methuselah Enzyme, Stewart showed wit, but it was clear that it wasn't Henry James. There was, however, a certain charm to Six Weeks (1976), told by a married aspirant for a Democratic senatorial nomination who becomes infatuated with a cold-cream heiress, largely at the behest of her 11-year-old, would-be nymphet daughter who, beset by cancer, has less than two months to live. Nabokov it isn't, but certainly better than the 1982 film with Dudley Moore & Mary Tyler Moore.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Nick Stewart.
218 reviews15 followers
December 1, 2018
How the founder of a rubber manufacturing dynasty winds up with six children and ten grandchildren is beyond me. Author Stewart does a good job filling nearly 800 pages with morally ambiguous empire building, historical happenings, romantic entanglements, class warfare and, of course, bedroom & boardroom shenanigans.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews