logo
John Irving's 'Queen Esther' returns readers to setting of 'The Cider House Rules'

John Irving's 'Queen Esther' returns readers to setting of 'The Cider House Rules'

Yahoo06-02-2025
NEW YORK (AP) — In John Irving's next book, the author is returning to St. Cloud's, Maine, and to the orphanage made famous in his acclaimed 'The Cider House Rules.'
Simon & Schuster announced Thursday that Irving's 'Queen Esther' will be published Nov. 4. His novel will bring back Dr. Wilbur Larch from 'The Cider House Rules,' but otherwise features a new set of characters. According to Simon & Schuster, 'Queen Esther' will span much of the 20th century as it follows the life of Esther Nacht, a Viennese Jew born in 1905, abandoned at age 4 and taken in as a teen by a New England family.
Irving ends the story in Jerusalem, in 1981.
'The construction of this novel long predates the events of Oct. 7, and everything that's happened in Israel since those terrorist attacks and the hostage-taking," Irving said in a statement. 'With hindsight, it's easy to say that what I saw and heard in Israel in the early 1980s serves as a precursor to what has developed since that time, but this is what historical fiction is for.'
Irving, 82, is also known for such acclaimed works as 'The Hotel New Hampshire,' 'The World According to Garp' and 'A Prayer for Owen Meany.' He published 'The Cider House Rules' in 1985 and won an Oscar for writing the screenplay for the 1999 movie adaptation. Michael Caine, who played Dr. Larch, received an Oscar for best supporting actor.
'One of the deepest pleasures of reading John Irving comes from discovering the turns in his story along with his characters, so I will give away no plot details, other than to say this: In 'Queen Esther,' John Irving literally takes readers where he's never taken them before," Irving's editor, Simon and Schuster CEO Jonathan Karp, said in a statement.
"The fact that John is still breaking new artistic ground in his 80s and doing so with such audacious and impeccably crafted storytelling, is yet another reason why he is one of the world's greatest writers.'
Hillel Italie, The Associated Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Singer Cleo Laine, regarded as Britain's greatest jazz voice, dies at 97
Singer Cleo Laine, regarded as Britain's greatest jazz voice, dies at 97

San Francisco Chronicle​

time11 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Singer Cleo Laine, regarded as Britain's greatest jazz voice, dies at 97

LONDON (AP) — Cleo Laine, whose husky contralto was one of the most distinctive voices in jazz and who was regarded by many as Britain's greatest contribution to the quintessentially American music, has died. She was 97. The Stables, a charity and venue Laine founded with her late jazz musician husband John Dankworth, said Friday it was 'greatly saddened' by the news that 'one of its founders and Life President, Dame Cleo Laine has passed away." Monica Ferguson, artistic director of The Stables, said Laine "will be greatly missed, but her unique talent will always be remembered.' Laine's career spanned the Atlantic and crossed genres: She sang the songs of Kurt Weill, Arnold Schoenberg and Robert Schumann; she acted on stage and on film, and even played God in a production of Benjamin Britten's "Noye's Fludde." Laine's life and art were intimately bound up with band leader Dankworth, who gave her a job and her stage name in 1951, and married her seven years later. Both were still performing after their 80th birthdays. Dankworth died in 2010 at 82. In 1997, Laine became the first British jazz artist to be made a dame, the female equivalent of a knight. "It is British jazz that should have received the accolade for its service to me," she said when the honor was announced. "It has given me a wonderful life, a successful career and an opportunity to travel the globe doing what I love to do." Laine was born Clementina Dinah Campbell in 1927. Her father, Alexander Campbell, was a Jamaican who loved opera and earned money during the Depression as a street singer. Despite hard times, her British mother, Minnie, made sure that her daughter had piano, voice and dance lessons. She began performing at local events at age 3, and at age 12 she got a role as a movie extra in "The Thief of Bagdad." Leaving school at 14, Laine went to work as a hairdresser and faced repeated rejection in her efforts to get a job as a singer. A decade later, in 1951, she tried out for the Johnny Dankworth Seven, and succeeded. "Clementina Campbell" was judged too long for a marquee, so she became Cleo Laine. "John said that when he heard me, I didn't sound like anyone else who was singing at the time," Laine once said. "I guess the reason I didn't get the other jobs is that they were looking for a singer who did sound like somebody else." Laine had a remarkable range, from tenor to contralto, and a sound often described as "smoky." Dankworth, in an interview with the Irish Independent, recalled Laine's audition. "They were all sitting there with stony faces, so I asked the Scottish trumpet player Jimmy Deuchar, who was looking very glum and was the hardest nut of all, whether he thought she had something. 'Something?' he said, 'She's got everything!'" Offered 6 pounds a week, Laine demanded — and got — 7 pounds. "They used to call me 'Scruff', although I don't think I was scruffy. It was just that having come from the sticks, I didn't know how to put things together as well as the other singers of the day," she told the Irish Independent. "And anyway, I didn't have the money, because they weren't paying me enough." Recognition came swiftly. Laine was runner-up in Melody Maker's "girl singer" category in 1952, and topped the list in 1956 and 1957. She married Dankworth — and quit his band — in 1958, a year after her divorce from her first husband, George Langridge. As Dankworth's band prospered, Laine began to feel underused. "I thought, no, I'm not going to just sit on the band and be a singer of songs every now and again when he fancied it. So it was then that I decided I wasn't going to stay with the band and I was going to go off and try to do something solo-wise," she said in a BBC documentary. "When I said I was leaving, he said, 'Will you marry me?' That was a good ploy, wasn't it, huh?" They were married on March 18, 1958. A son, Alec, was born in 1960, and daughter Jacqueline followed in 1963. Despite her happy marriage, Laine forged a career independent of Dankworth. "Whenever anybody starts putting a label on me, I say, 'Oh, no you don't,' and I go and do something different," Laine told The Associated Press in 1985 when she was appearing on stage in New York in "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." Her stage career began in 1958 when she was invited to join the cast of a West Indian play, "Flesh to a Tiger," at the Royal Court Theatre, and was surprised to find herself in the lead role. She won a Moscow Arts Theatre Award for her performance. "Valmouth" followed in 1959, "The Seven Deadly Sins" in 1961, "The Trojan Women" in 1966 and "Hedda Gabler" in 1970. The role of Julie in Jerome Kern's "Show Boat" in 1971 provided Laine with a show-stopping song, "Bill." Laine began winning a following in the United States in 1972 with a concert at the Alice Tully Hall in New York. It wasn't well-attended, but The New York Times gave her a glowing review. The following year, she and Dankworth drew a sold-out audience at Carnegie Hall, launching a series of popular appearances. "Cleo at Carnegie" won a Grammy award in 1986, the same year she was a Tony nominee for "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." A reviewer for Variety in 2002 found her voice going strong: "a dark, creamy voice, remarkable range and control from bottomless contralto to a sweet clear soprano. Her perfect pitch and phrasing is always framed with musical imagination and good taste." Perhaps Laine's most difficult performance of all was on Feb. 6, 2010, at a concert celebrating the 40th anniversary of the concert venue she and Dankworth had founded at their home, during which Laine and both of her children performed. "I'm terribly sorry that Sir John can't be here today," Laine told the crowd at the end of the show. 'But earlier on my husband died in hospital.' Laine is survived by her son and daughter.

See the first trailer for ‘The History of Sound,' a romantic period drama set in New England
See the first trailer for ‘The History of Sound,' a romantic period drama set in New England

Boston Globe

time40 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

See the first trailer for ‘The History of Sound,' a romantic period drama set in New England

In the film, Mescal ('Gladiator II'), stars as Lionel, a singer who moves from Kentucky to Boston, where he meets David, a fellow student studying music composition, played by O'Connor ('Challengers'). David is soon drafted into the war, but the pair later reconnects for a journey through Maine, where they collect traditional folk songs from the region to preserve for future generations. Oscar-winning actor and Kingston resident Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in May, earning a six-minute standing ovation, according to Advertisement Shattuck, who's married to Milton native Advertisement ''The History of Sound' is polyphonic fiction, a choir of characters from different ages and different stations of life,' Vognar wrote. '[It] marks Shattuck as one of the form's brightest lights.' Isabella Bernstein can be reached at

UK police charge actor Micheal Ward with rape and sexual assault
UK police charge actor Micheal Ward with rape and sexual assault

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

UK police charge actor Micheal Ward with rape and sexual assault

LONDON (AP) — British actor Micheal Ward has been charged with rape and sexual assault, police said Friday. The Metropolitan Police force said the 27-year-old faces two counts of rape and three counts of sexual assault. The charges relate to one woman and the offenses reportedly took place in January 2023. The Crown Prosecution Service said it authorized the charges 'having carefully reviewed a file of evidence.' Ward is due to appear at London's Thames Magistrates' Court on Aug. 28. Ward has appeared in films including 'Blue Story,' 'The Book of Clarence' and the recently released American political satire 'Eddington.' In 2020 he won the Rising Star award at the British Academy Film Awards, or BAFTAs. He was nominated for an acting BAFTA for Sam Mendes' 'Empire of Light' and for a BAFTA television award for the Steve McQueen-directed series 'Small Axe.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store