Elizabeth Chater (1910–2004)
Author of The Elsingham Portrait
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
She also wrote under the names Lisa Moore, Lee Chater, and Lee Chaytor.
Series
Works by Elizabeth Chater
Doubleday Romance Library #39: Lasting Love, Milady Hot-at-Hand, When Love is Grown (1980) — Contributor — 4 copies
Doubleday Romance Library #24: Hawaiian Interlude, The Elsingham Portrait, The Shadow and the Star (1979) — Contributor — 3 copies
"Backyard Universe" 2 copies
Doubleday Romance Library #30. Tender is the Touch, The Gamester, Dark Paradise (1980) — Contributor — 2 copies
How Not To Make A Dress 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Chater, Elizabeth Eileen
- Other names
- Chater, Lee
Chaytor, Lee
Moore, Lisa - Birthdate
- 1910-08-22
- Date of death
- 2004-11-10
- Gender
- female
- Education
- San Diego State University (MA | English | 1963)
University of British Columbia (BA | English | 1931) - Occupations
- university professor
novelist - Organizations
- San Diego State University
- Awards and honors
- Outstanding Professor of the Year (SDSU ∙ 1977)
Distinguished Teacher Award (SDSU ∙ 1968)
Writer's Digest Short Story Contest winner (1975-10) - Agent
- Richard Curtis Associates, Inc.
- Relationships
- Chater, Christopher John (grandson)
- Short biography
- She wrote in several genres including science fiction, mystery, and romance.
- Nationality
- Canada
- Birthplace
- Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
- Places of residence
- La Mesa, California, USA
Chicago, Illinois, USA - Place of death
- Irvine, California, USA
- Burial location
- Irvine, California, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- She also wrote under the names Lisa Moore, Lee Chater, and Lee Chaytor.
- Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
A rollicking good read. Normally, I'm vexed by the what I feel to be incomplete treatments of time travel. This, however, airly waved a hand at the how and why and paradoxes, and moved on to being a romance novel, and it was funny.
Mousy librarian transported through time to inhabit a wild and wanton woman's body. Said woman's husband dislikes original wife because she's been deceitful and adulterous. However, mousy librarian is true and trustworthy and all good things.
But then her evil show more lady's maid who is practicing evil somehow comes into the picture, eventually convinces everyone in the village that mousy faithful librarian in beautiful cheating woman's body has escaped to, so she won't a) fall victim to her evil lady's maid and b) get sent to Bedlam.
There's also a courageous nurse who was the husband's childhood nurse, and cottages, and a vicar, and someone named Elspeth.
Go, read it. It doesn't take long and it's totally worth it. show less
Mousy librarian transported through time to inhabit a wild and wanton woman's body. Said woman's husband dislikes original wife because she's been deceitful and adulterous. However, mousy librarian is true and trustworthy and all good things.
But then her evil show more lady's maid who is practicing evil somehow comes into the picture, eventually convinces everyone in the village that mousy faithful librarian in beautiful cheating woman's body has escaped to, so she won't a) fall victim to her evil lady's maid and b) get sent to Bedlam.
There's also a courageous nurse who was the husband's childhood nurse, and cottages, and a vicar, and someone named Elspeth.
Go, read it. It doesn't take long and it's totally worth it. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
One of the literary devices I'm always a complete sucker for is the character plucked from her own time and dropped, clueless, into another, whether through straightforward time travel (if there is such a thing) or some kind of sorcery. It's the latter in The Elsingham Portrait – apparently – and lots of fun. I won this book through LibraryThing's Member Giveaways – thank you to the publisher and LT.
Kathryn Hendrix is having a bad day. Her boyfriend invited her to lunch, and she has show more been sitting at their table alone for over an hour, the rosy dreams she started out with of engagement rings and white weddings and an escape from her dreary, dreary life have begun to whiff away into nothing. Humiliation finally wins out over optimism, and she catches a bus to go home to her dreary apartment, only to see from the height of the bus just why her man never showed up: he is otherwise engaged. With someone much prettier and better dressed than Kathryn. With some thoughts of trying to reach him, she hurries off the bus, but it's too late. And it starts to rain. And she left her umbrella somewhere. And she had jumped through a few hoops to be granted the time off from her dreary, underpaid job as a NYC librarian in order to meet Don … Crushed, unable to go back to work and face the coworkers who will certainly be expecting her to show up with a diamond, she takes shelter in what turns out to be an art gallery.
The focal point of the gallery's collection is a stunning painting of a stunning woman in a golden gown. Kathryn looks into the painted eyes … and suddenly finds herself transported back to the time of the painting, 1775, and into the woman in the painting, the evil (or much-maligned) Lady Nadine Elsingham. Things do not go uphill from here.
Kathryn's struggles to find help from someone, anyone, are largely realistic. Everyone around her believes that either Lady Nadine is up to something new, or she's gone mad, or possibly both, and without any real proof of who she is and where (and when) she's from Kathryn begins to have suspicions of her own about her sanity. She starts out by talking about the revolt about to happen in the Colonies – but since it hasn't happened yet it doesn't exactly serve as proof. Here the author missed a big step, for me: Kathryn asks the date, and is told that it is April 18, 1775, and I squeaked a little:
Listen my children and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;
Hardly a man is now alive
Who remembers that famous day and year.
I guess Kathryn doesn't know her Longfellow, though, because instead of giving a similar squeak she begins talking about Lexington and Concord on April 19. Which meets with deep skepticism. It's a tricky situation; anything she says which can't be verified counts as raving; anything which can be verified counts as witchcraft – and either way she could end up slapped into Bedlam. Her strange accent is considered a trick; her lack of recognition for people around her is considered deceit; her apparent change of demeanor from cold and cutting to warm and innocently bewildered is considered bait for some new trap she's setting. She can't really win.
There are two things which – please be warned – may be spoiler-y which bothered me a little:
First, and less spoilerific, is Kathryn's deep desire to return to her own time. In a way, I suppose, it bucks expectations: she has gone from being a somewhat plain and impoverished girl trapped in a somewhat dead-end boring job who has just been jilted … to being a gorgeous and wealthy woman, waited on hand and foot and married to a thrillingly handsome man. But she fights like mad to return home. It isn't equal rights or sanitation or modern(ish) medicine or frustration with 18th century clothing, or even concern for the original owner of her current body that seems to drive her – it's simply that she elsewhere and feels she needs to return. It never seems to occur to her until very late in the book that it might be a fine thing to begin to settle where and when she is.
The second thing (more spoileriferous), in two words: How? And – Why? Kathryn never learns the mechanism by which she was booted back two centuries, and therefore neither does the reader. Did it indeed have something to do with the evil witchy woman who apparently never left Nadine's side, and the strange drug she would dose her charge with? Was it a spell? Or simply some bizarre Twilight Zone-esque swapping out of two women discontented with their lots? I would have loved to have seen at least a glimpse of Nadine's fate; did she indeed swap with Kathryn and find herself dowdy and confused in a bewildering world of noise and speed, or did Kathryn just vanish (or collapse, an empty shell) and Nadine wisp out into the ether? In fact, I would love to see a companion book to The Elsingham Portrait, telling her story – free of the constraints of her day, in the era of mini-skirts and free love, her strong personality would have a blast, and free of the evil influence of the Donner woman she might turn out to be a decent human being. (In fact, I would love to completely steal this whole idea. Maybe someday after I've written the other eleventy-one ideas floating around in various states of completion…) show less
Kathryn Hendrix is having a bad day. Her boyfriend invited her to lunch, and she has show more been sitting at their table alone for over an hour, the rosy dreams she started out with of engagement rings and white weddings and an escape from her dreary, dreary life have begun to whiff away into nothing. Humiliation finally wins out over optimism, and she catches a bus to go home to her dreary apartment, only to see from the height of the bus just why her man never showed up: he is otherwise engaged. With someone much prettier and better dressed than Kathryn. With some thoughts of trying to reach him, she hurries off the bus, but it's too late. And it starts to rain. And she left her umbrella somewhere. And she had jumped through a few hoops to be granted the time off from her dreary, underpaid job as a NYC librarian in order to meet Don … Crushed, unable to go back to work and face the coworkers who will certainly be expecting her to show up with a diamond, she takes shelter in what turns out to be an art gallery.
The focal point of the gallery's collection is a stunning painting of a stunning woman in a golden gown. Kathryn looks into the painted eyes … and suddenly finds herself transported back to the time of the painting, 1775, and into the woman in the painting, the evil (or much-maligned) Lady Nadine Elsingham. Things do not go uphill from here.
Kathryn's struggles to find help from someone, anyone, are largely realistic. Everyone around her believes that either Lady Nadine is up to something new, or she's gone mad, or possibly both, and without any real proof of who she is and where (and when) she's from Kathryn begins to have suspicions of her own about her sanity. She starts out by talking about the revolt about to happen in the Colonies – but since it hasn't happened yet it doesn't exactly serve as proof. Here the author missed a big step, for me: Kathryn asks the date, and is told that it is April 18, 1775, and I squeaked a little:
Listen my children and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;
Hardly a man is now alive
Who remembers that famous day and year.
I guess Kathryn doesn't know her Longfellow, though, because instead of giving a similar squeak she begins talking about Lexington and Concord on April 19. Which meets with deep skepticism. It's a tricky situation; anything she says which can't be verified counts as raving; anything which can be verified counts as witchcraft – and either way she could end up slapped into Bedlam. Her strange accent is considered a trick; her lack of recognition for people around her is considered deceit; her apparent change of demeanor from cold and cutting to warm and innocently bewildered is considered bait for some new trap she's setting. She can't really win.
There are two things which – please be warned – may be spoiler-y which bothered me a little:
First, and less spoilerific, is Kathryn's deep desire to return to her own time. In a way, I suppose, it bucks expectations: she has gone from being a somewhat plain and impoverished girl trapped in a somewhat dead-end boring job who has just been jilted … to being a gorgeous and wealthy woman, waited on hand and foot and married to a thrillingly handsome man. But she fights like mad to return home. It isn't equal rights or sanitation or modern(ish) medicine or frustration with 18th century clothing, or even concern for the original owner of her current body that seems to drive her – it's simply that she elsewhere and feels she needs to return. It never seems to occur to her until very late in the book that it might be a fine thing to begin to settle where and when she is.
The second thing (more spoileriferous), in two words: How? And – Why? Kathryn never learns the mechanism by which she was booted back two centuries, and therefore neither does the reader. Did it indeed have something to do with the evil witchy woman who apparently never left Nadine's side, and the strange drug she would dose her charge with? Was it a spell? Or simply some bizarre Twilight Zone-esque swapping out of two women discontented with their lots? I would have loved to have seen at least a glimpse of Nadine's fate; did she indeed swap with Kathryn and find herself dowdy and confused in a bewildering world of noise and speed, or did Kathryn just vanish (or collapse, an empty shell) and Nadine wisp out into the ether? In fact, I would love to see a companion book to The Elsingham Portrait, telling her story – free of the constraints of her day, in the era of mini-skirts and free love, her strong personality would have a blast, and free of the evil influence of the Donner woman she might turn out to be a decent human being. (In fact, I would love to completely steal this whole idea. Maybe someday after I've written the other eleventy-one ideas floating around in various states of completion…) show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
Leslie's evil guardian, heir to her little brother's earldom, is trying to murder the boy, so Leslie escapes with her brother and two sisters to the unoccupied ducal estate of Drogo Trevelyan, who discovers them and, despite being a cynical rake, helps them find sanctuary in London. Drogo is an unfortunate name for the duke, because I kept thinking of him as Drongo.
Short and sentimental. I'm not keen on the combination of naive young girl and world-weary rake.
Short and sentimental. I'm not keen on the combination of naive young girl and world-weary rake.
I received my copy of "The Elsingham Portrait" from LibraryThing, in return for a review.
I enjoyed the story, but was a little let down by the romance part of it. Kathryn falls in love with John's kind eyes, and John falls in love because she is not his real wife, Nadine. Is this right or am I missing something?
Okay, so the premise of the story is Kathryn goes back in time, into another woman's body, Nadine Elsingham. She must try to convince the man who is now her husband that she is not show more crazy, and he shouldn't send her away. All the while she is trying to escape Donner, who may be a witch and had Nadine under some spell.
The story was a fun read as far as the adventure and all the events that Kathryn had to go through. The characters were likable (except for Donner and Adrian, of course). You felt pity for John. But I wanted more time between the two main characters. He was only in her presence 4 or 5 times. And John, thinking she was Nadine, was mean and rude. So where and when did they fall in love?
There were also a few errors in word usage throughout the book. Example: "At least you are remarkably consistent. Those are the dates you quoted me last night. There is no coherence in your story...."
Doesn't coherence mean consistency? To have no coherence would mean that she didn't stick to her story.
Overall, if you can overlook some errors and the fact that the romance is not really a romance then you will enjoy this book. It is a fun read and exciting. The action is almost non-stop. show less
I enjoyed the story, but was a little let down by the romance part of it. Kathryn falls in love with John's kind eyes, and John falls in love because she is not his real wife, Nadine. Is this right or am I missing something?
Okay, so the premise of the story is Kathryn goes back in time, into another woman's body, Nadine Elsingham. She must try to convince the man who is now her husband that she is not show more crazy, and he shouldn't send her away. All the while she is trying to escape Donner, who may be a witch and had Nadine under some spell.
The story was a fun read as far as the adventure and all the events that Kathryn had to go through. The characters were likable (except for Donner and Adrian, of course). You felt pity for John. But I wanted more time between the two main characters. He was only in her presence 4 or 5 times. And John, thinking she was Nadine, was mean and rude. So where and when did they fall in love?
There were also a few errors in word usage throughout the book. Example: "At least you are remarkably consistent. Those are the dates you quoted me last night. There is no coherence in your story...."
Doesn't coherence mean consistency? To have no coherence would mean that she didn't stick to her story.
Overall, if you can overlook some errors and the fact that the romance is not really a romance then you will enjoy this book. It is a fun read and exciting. The action is almost non-stop. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
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