Charlotte Vale Allen (1941–2023)
Author of Somebody’s Baby
About the Author
Charlotte Vale Allen was born in Toronto, Canada, on January 19, 1941. She spent several years in England, where she worked as a singer and actress. After returning to Canada for a short time, she immigrated to the United States in 1966. Allen began writing in 1970 and sold her first novel, Love show more Life, in 1974. Her 36 novels have sold seven million copies, most of which have been translated into more than 20 languages. In her novels, Allen attempts to offer optimism and insight on many issues women face. In her most celebrated work, an autobiography titled Daddy's Girl and published in 1980, Allen relates her experience as an abused child. She was listed as one of the 100 most borrowed authors in the United Kingdom by the British Public Library system in 1990. Other titles include Somebody's Baby and Claudia's Shadow. A full-time writer since 1976, Allen also pursues interests in photography, cooking, and needlework. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Charlotte Vale Allen - Photo by Dianna Last ©2002
Works by Charlotte Vale Allen
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Allen, Charlotte Vale
- Legal name
- Allen, Charlotte Vale
- Other names
- Marlowe, Katharine
Vincent, Clare - Birthdate
- 1941-01-19
- Date of death
- 2023-01-12
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- actor
writer
singer - Short biography
- Charlotte was born on 19 January 1941 in Toronto, Canada. She was abused during childhood. She moved to England from 1961 to 1964, where she worked as a television actress and singer. She returned to Toronto briefly, performing as a singer and in cabaret revues until she emigrated to the United States in 1966.
In 1970, she married Walter Bateman Allen Jr and instaled in Connecticut in 1970. Shortly after her marriage, she began writing and sold her first novel, Love Life, in 1974. Prior to its publication, she had contracted to do a series of paperback originals for Warner Books, with the result that in 1976 three of her books appeared in print. Her award-winning autobiography, Daddy’s Girl , was actually the first book she wrote, but in 1971 it was deemed too controversial by the editors who read it. It wasn’t until 1980, after she’d gained success as a novelist, that the groundbreaking book was finally published.
Charlotte’s 30-plus novels have sold over eight-million copies, have been published in all English-speaking countries, in braille, and have been translated into more than 20 languages. She is consistently one of the most borrowed authors in worldwide English-language libraries. She also used the pseudonym of Katharine Marlowe. In 2000, CBS bought the rights to Somebody’s Baby for a movie-of-the-week, and several of her other novels are currently under option for film and television.
In her writing, she tries to deal with issues confronting women, being informative while at the same time offering a measure of optimism. "My strongest ability as a writer is to make women real, to take you inside their heads and let you know how they feel, and to make you care about them." Her goal "has always been to communicate, to enlighten people about women’s issues without being preachy, and to entertain while doing it. If I succeed in getting someone to think about the book’s content after they’ve finished reading it, then I’ve accomplished what I set out to do."
A film buff and an amateur photographer, Charlotte enjoys foreign travel. She finds cooking and needlework therapeutic, and is a lifelong movie fan. The mother of an adult daughter, she continued living in Connecticut. - Nationality
- Canada
USA - Birthplace
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- Places of residence
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada
UK
Connecticut, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Members
Reviews
"Grace Notes" is such a poorly written novel I’m embarrassed to say I read it. This book is advertised as a story about spousal abuse, however the only real abuse occurs 22 years prior to the opening scene. A description of the plot: it’s a murder but not a mystery, and the murder victim is not actually a character in the book. It’s a comedy but it is not funny. It’s a plea by the author to be broadminded and accept all people including gays, but Charlotte Vale Allen hypocritically show more seems to have a pretty narrow minded opinion of conservative straight people.
The plot is predictable and boring. And no surprise here...."Grace Notes" has a happy ending: the gay guys end up living together, Grace gets engaged, the daughter goes off to college, and the murderer gets caught. And Allen conveniently disposes of Grace's parents, who turn their back on gay Gus, by having them accidentally killed in a car crash.
Besides a plot with no suspense, emotion, or depth, there is no character development. In fact, none of the characters seem like real people. They are caricatures. Grace’s boyfriend is a redheaded Jewish “Santa Claus” - the author’s words - not mine. Grace’s daughter Nicky, is a very generous wealthy heiress “shiksa (meaning non-Jewish) princess” - the author’s word’s - not mine. All characters are 100% good, or 100% evil; a fairy tale. A good portion of the book is dialogue, but there is no serious conversation. All the characters talk in the same ‘cute’ jargon that was annoying and insulting to the readers intelligence...unless the reader is a ten year old.
Having suffered abuse as a child, Allen may be an authority on abusive behavior, but when it comes to offering advise through novels, her psychoanalysis and amateur philosophizing is ludicrous. Her intention to bring awareness to women that they don’t have to tolerate abusive relationships is honorable, but she needs to take a few creative writing classes. This is the first and last book I will ever read that was written by Charlotte Vale Allen. show less
The plot is predictable and boring. And no surprise here...."Grace Notes" has a happy ending: the gay guys end up living together, Grace gets engaged, the daughter goes off to college, and the murderer gets caught. And Allen conveniently disposes of Grace's parents, who turn their back on gay Gus, by having them accidentally killed in a car crash.
Besides a plot with no suspense, emotion, or depth, there is no character development. In fact, none of the characters seem like real people. They are caricatures. Grace’s boyfriend is a redheaded Jewish “Santa Claus” - the author’s words - not mine. Grace’s daughter Nicky, is a very generous wealthy heiress “shiksa (meaning non-Jewish) princess” - the author’s word’s - not mine. All characters are 100% good, or 100% evil; a fairy tale. A good portion of the book is dialogue, but there is no serious conversation. All the characters talk in the same ‘cute’ jargon that was annoying and insulting to the readers intelligence...unless the reader is a ten year old.
Having suffered abuse as a child, Allen may be an authority on abusive behavior, but when it comes to offering advise through novels, her psychoanalysis and amateur philosophizing is ludicrous. Her intention to bring awareness to women that they don’t have to tolerate abusive relationships is honorable, but she needs to take a few creative writing classes. This is the first and last book I will ever read that was written by Charlotte Vale Allen. show less
The author stated this book would reflect the Phantom of the Opera/Beauty and the Beast story that I hold so dear to my heart. The basic premise does include some Phantom-esque dynamics, but the story quickly fails to keep up with the heart of the original story. First of all, I bothered me to no end that she would keep the name of the main character, Erik, but change the name of his love interest to something other than Christine. It just felt wrong, the entire time. We first meet Marisa show more when she is 16, and the book develops some rather heavy Lolita references that carry through to the very end. The author including love scenes between a 16 year old and 30+ man just felt icky. The characters never really developed or matured through the novel. Marisa never seems to age much past 16. She and Erik are immature, selfish and contemplate suicide far too often for rational people. The book lacks a plot for the most part. The author will also jump years between paragraphs, which gets annoying after a while. The "climax" of the book is heavily reminiscent of Lolita as well. By the end, I was so disgusted with the characters that was glad the book was over and I didn't have to read about them anymore. A poor example of Phantom inspired fiction. show less
Kyra is the daughter of a famous actress and director, and her brother Kyle is also a famous actor. When the book opens, Kyra's husband has just been killed by an out-of-control taxi cab in NYC. In the weeks following his death, as she is grieving, a young girl shows up at Kyra's door claiming to be her daughter, even has a birth certificate with Kyra's name on it. Kyra is beyond shocked because she has never been pregnant and can't have children because of a birth defect. This girl also has show more a 3-year-old boy, Jesse, with her and demands that Kyra keep him because she no longer wants him because her boyfriend doesn't like kids. Kyra takes Jesse, and the girl leaves. Turns out, Jesse has been severly abused. Sounds like a great beginning, right? It was, and then it deteriorated rapidly from there. Too many subplots that didn't tie into the main story and were just unbelievable. When the 14-year-old Jesse's kidneys failed and Kyra allowed him to make the decision to die rather than have dialysis or a transplant, I gave up on the book. There is good chick lit out there, but this would not be one of them. show less
Emancipated long before anybody had heard of it, she escaped her family to save [her] life. The life that is recounted in Daddy's Girl is harrowing, yet the memoir is distinguished by Allen's heroic efforts to rescue and support herself, by herself. This memoir emphasizes - in addition to a commitment not to live life as a "walking wound" - the power of language.
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Statistics
- Works
- 50
- Members
- 1,352
- Popularity
- #19,014
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
- 25
- ISBNs
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