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Belva Plain (1915–2010)

Author of Evergreen

67+ Works 9,455 Members 124 Reviews 7 Favorited

About the Author

Belva Plain lives in northern New Jersey. She is the author of the bestselling novels "Evergreen", "Random Winds", "Eden Burning", "Crescent City", "The Golden Cup", "Tapestry", "Blessings", "Harvest", "Treasures", "Whispers", "Daybreak", "The Carousel", "Promises", "Secrecy", "Homecoming", "Legacy show more of Silence", "Fortune's Hand", and "After the Fire". (Publisher Provided) Belva Plain was born in New York City on October 9, 1915. She received a degree in history from Barnard College in 1939. Her first short story was published in Cosmopolitan when she was 25 years old, and she continued to write for the publication for years. Her first novel, Evergreen (1978), was on the New York Times bestseller list for 41 weeks and was made into a television miniseries. Her other works include Crescent City, Promises, Blessings, The Carousel, Daybreak, and After the Fire. She died on October 12, 2010 at the age of 95. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the names: Belva Plain, Belva Plain, Plainm Belva

Series

Works by Belva Plain

Evergreen (1978) 760 copies, 15 reviews
Whispers (1993) 487 copies, 9 reviews
After the Fire (2000) 486 copies, 7 reviews
Legacy of Silence (1999) 476 copies, 6 reviews
Her Father's House (2002) 449 copies, 3 reviews
Secrecy (1997) 443 copies, 4 reviews
Blessings (1989) 427 copies, 7 reviews
Looking Back (2001) 418 copies, 5 reviews
Daybreak (1994) 417 copies, 8 reviews
The Sight of the Stars (2004) 416 copies, 7 reviews
Promises (1996) 411 copies, 4 reviews
The Carousel (1992) 409 copies, 3 reviews
Fortune's Hand (1999) 408 copies, 5 reviews
Tapestry (1988) 405 copies, 2 reviews
Homecoming (1997) 385 copies, 6 reviews
Random Winds (1980) 376 copies, 7 reviews
Harvest (1990) 352 copies, 2 reviews
The Golden Cup (1985) 349 copies, 1 review
Crescent City (1978) 343 copies, 5 reviews
Treasures (1982) 327 copies, 2 reviews
Crossroads (2005) 300 copies, 5 reviews
Eden Burning (1982) 277 copies, 3 reviews
Heartwood: A Novel (2011) 255 copies, 5 reviews
Le collier de Jérusalem (2006) 3 copies
Evergreen, del 2 (1990) 2 copies
La mano de la fortuna (2003) 2 copies
Biblioteca de belva plain (1994) 2 copies
Traição por Amor 1 copy, 1 review
Evergreen [1985 TV mini series] — Original book — 1 copy
Volver 1 copy
Ein bisschen Glück (2006) 1 copy
Svikalogn 1 copy
Evergreen, del 1 (1990) 1 copy
Heartland 1 copy
Zakázaná láska (2000) 1 copy
Vientos sin rumbo (1984) 1 copy
The She 1 copy
Les diamants de l'hiver. 1 copy, 1 review
Les farrel, tome 2 (2001) 1 copy
Zimzelen 1 copy

Associated Works

Talking God (1989) — Author — 2,252 copies, 28 reviews
The Jewish Writer (1998) — Contributor — 58 copies
The Do-It-Yourself Bestseller: A Workbook (1982) — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies
Det Bästas bokval, vol. 178 — Author — 2 copies

Tagged

A (20) adult (19) Adult Fiction (51) AF (23) Author - Belva Plain (22) basement (27) belva-plain (24) chick lit (24) drama (32) F Plain (23) family (47) family saga (51) fiction (908) general fiction (39) hardcover (41) HC (23) historical fiction (105) Large Print (75) library (20) New York (22) novel (123) own (31) own - in US (20) paperback (33) read (57) Roman (30) romance (296) to-read (213) unread (36) women's fiction (52)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Plain, Belva
Other names
Offenberg, Belva (birth name)
Birthdate
1915-10-09
Date of death
2010-10-12
Gender
female
Education
Barnard College (BA|1939)
Occupations
novelist
short story writer
Short biography
Belva Offenberg was born and raised in New York City in a Jewish-American family. She graduated from Barnard College in 1939 with a degree in history. In 1941, she married Irving Plain, an ophthalmologist, and had three children. While raising her children, Belva Plain started to write short stories and sold the first one to Cosmopolitan at age 25. She became a prolific writer of stories and articles for women's magazines such as Redbook and Good Housekeeping. She was already a grandmother when her first novel, Evergreen, was published in 1978. It topped the New York Times best-seller list for 41 weeks and was adapted into an NBC-TV miniseries. She went on to write about 20 more bestselling novels. Although her writing did not always please literary critics, the books were highly popular with readers. In her work, Belva Plain was particularly interested in countering clichés about Jewish families.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA (birthplace)
New Canaan, Connecticut, USA
South Orange, New Jersey, USA
Short Hills, New Jersey, USA (death)
Place of death
Short Hills, New Jersey, USA
Burial location
BNai Jeshuron Cemetery, Hillside, Union County, New Jersey USA
Associated Place (for map)
New Jersey, USA

Members

Reviews

130 reviews
You have to be kidding me.

Good premise, but oh my god. Especially with the guy who cheated on his wife. Grandma invites the man who cheated on her granddaughter to her house and he goes into her bedroom and refuses to leave until she forgives him. This is the asshole who cheated on her on a whim when they were out for dinner at the country club. Just like that. And then when he is trying to reconcile with her, he's like 'I would like to think that if the positions were resolved, I would try show more to forgive you' or something like that, I forget the exact wording.

Double standard much? He MIGHT forgive her, but he expects her to forgive him (he had actually previously harassed her to the point she had to get a restraining order against him)

And Lucy, what a fucking asshole brain-dead kid. She is 'spirited', something her parents and grandparents chuckle over, instead of disciplining her, so that when her mother tells her NO several times, the little shit decides to ignore Mom and run across a frozen lake, in which the idiot then falls through the ice.

Serves her right. But no, the adults freak out and rescue her. And somehow, the resuscitation of this shitty little brat (instead of letting Darwinism play its natural role) mends all the rifts in the family - between the brothers, the in-laws, and the wife and her cheating husband, like some kind of fucking magic wand. This book was a complete waste of my time, and of the paper it was printed on.

Yeah, this is a harsh review, but god fucking damn, this book just really stuck in my craw. Especially that bratty little kid, i just want to punch her in the face. I know that makes me sound like a horrible person but trust me she really was a shitty little brat.
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“It is a truism, she thought, that each one of us is the result of decisions made by those who came before us, and they in turn are the product of actions taken by others, and back and back…”

These are the thoughts of Jane Hartzinger, the granddaughter of Holocaust victims, when the truth about her mother’s lover, Walter, is revealed decades after his death at the beginning of World War II. Jane’s mother, Caroline, who fled Germany with her adopted sister, Lore, and eventually was show more able to make it to America when she was eighteen and pregnant, had always believed her lover, Walter, was a Nazi and had deserted her because she was a Jew. Caroline and her illegitimate daughter, Eve, both lived with this lie until the discovery of Lore’s diaries after her death in 1993 revealed another truth.

This book tells the story of heartbreak, courage, and forgiveness of three generations of women and the men they relied on and loved. In a horrific time to be alive, each gave up a part of themselves so others could go on. Belva Plain, a gifted writer, tells this authentic and beautifully woven tapestry of love, life, and death in a story that will stay with you long after you’ve read the last page.
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The doctor's office is cool, white, sterile. But the doctor's words are blood tests prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that Margaret and Arthur Crawfield's beloved, dying son is not their child. Now they must face Peter's death and the shock of having a son they have never met. Grieving, yet compelled, they begin a search that will tear two families apart.
Laura and "Bud" Rice share an elegant home and two children, brilliant, handsome Tom, and cherished, chronically ill eleven-year-old Timmy. show more But after nineteen years of marriage, Laura's respectable husband is a stranger—and the reason for Tom's escalating involvement with a group of campus bigots. Suddenly the Crawfields enter their lives and shatter their fragile world. As the Rices' quiet Southern town explodes with hate and violence, the two familes must embrace—or be destroyed by—the shattering truth. show less
There are authors who can take a segment of time as little as a year, a month, or a day in one character’s life and write an award-winning novel. And then there are authors who have a story to tell. Some may not produce the polished prose of a Pulitzer Prize winner, but tremendous beauty is captured in their mesmerizing saga. That is the category in which Belva Plain’s "Evergreen" falls.

"Evergreen" was first published in 1978. Though it did not win any literary awards, the book did top show more the New York Times best seller list for a record 41 weeks. It is a novel of epic proportions - the story of a young orphaned Jewish girl from Poland who migrates to America to live in New York City with distant relatives. Taking the reader from 1906 when Anna is a naive, wide eyed, enthusiastic child of 12 years old, to 1972 at age 78, she has become a very wise sophisticated, loving grandmother.

"Evergreen" touches on many life altering world events and cultural issues of the passing decades: World War I, the Depression, World War II and the economic boom that followed, and the Vietnam War. Encompassing love, marriage, children and grand-children, a life of sacrifice and luxury, misfortune and tragedy through which Anna finds great joy and tremendous sorrow. The most prominent cultural issues emphasized are anti-Semitism, interfaith marriage, infidelity, and alcoholism. It is a story of family and tradition, and watching everything change as time passes: customs, manners, fashion, family values, and life styles.

It is not a perfect novel. Belva Plain falls short in detailing historical data. Often skipping over entire eras with broad strokes, she sometimes creates a choppy disconnect in the reading. The protagonist, Anna, being of Jewish descent, does suffer the loss of relatives in the Holocaust. But being safely tucked away in America the reader gets very little feeling of the kind of emotional upheaval experienced in Europe. Maybe that’s the way it really was during World War II. American families were primarily concerned with their own loved ones going off to fight. And of making ends meet with all the young able-bodied men gone, food and gas being rationed, and shortages of nearly everything.

Some reviewers found "Evergreen" to be outdated, stating they enjoyed it more years ago as a contemporary novel. My reading experience was quite the opposite. Rereading "Evergreen" as an older mature woman, I could readily relate to Anna. I now have more compassion for her situation- now thoroughly appreciate her life journey. And reading "Evergreen" forty years after publication as historical fiction emphasizes the eternal cycle of human life, from cradle to grave, generation after generation.

"Evergreen" stands alone as a complete story but if you really enjoy it, Belva Plain also wrote several other books about the Werner family; "The Golden Cup", "Tapestry", and "Harvest".
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½

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Statistics

Works
67
Also by
34
Members
9,455
Popularity
#2,539
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
124
ISBNs
696
Languages
15
Favorited
7

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