Lady Chatterley's Lover

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19th century
A01=D. H. Lawrence
adultery
Author_D. H. Lawrence
Category=FBC
Category=FR
class difference
class relations
classic novel
countryside novel
desire
english classic
english society
eq_bestseller
eq_classics
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_romance
erotic literature
female desire
forbidden love
forthcoming
romance novel
scandalous book
stately home

Product details

  • ISBN 9781035076543
  • Dimensions: 130 x 197mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Pan Macmillan
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Connie’s unhappy marriage to Clifford Chatterley is scarred by mutual frustration and alienation. Her solitary existence is contained within the stifling parameters of Wragby, the Chatterley ancestral home.

Connie is presented with a chance to seize happiness and freedom when she finds herself falling into a consuming love affair with the estate’s gamekeeper, Mellors, and begins to discover a world of sexual opportunity and pleasure she had thought was lost to her.

The explosive passion of Connie and Mellors’ relationship – and the searing candour with which it is described – marked a watershed in twentieth-century fiction, garnering Lady Chatterley’s Lover a wide and enduring readership and lasting notoriety.

Madame Bovary, Lady Audley's Secret and Jane Eyre are also available in this Macmillan Collector’s Library series of gorgeous paperbacks featuring four of the most scandalous novels ever published.

David Herbert Lawrence was born on 11 September 1885 in Eastwood, a small mining village in Nottinghamshire, in the English Midlands. Despite ill health as a child and a comparatively disadvantageous position in society, he became a teacher in 1908, and took up a post at a school in Croydon, London. His first novel, The White Peacock, was published in 1910, and from then until his death he wrote feverishly, producing poetry, essays, plays, travel books, short stories, and eleven more novels, including The Rainbow, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley’s Lover. Lawrence travelled widely, settling for periods in Italy, New Mexico and Mexico. He married Frieda Weekley in 1914 and died of tuberculosis in 1930.

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