Daphne du Maurier, 1907 - 1989, DBE 1969, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, Lady BrowningEnglishFrançaisEspañolDeutschItalianoPortugese
The guide to Holiday Accommodation in Devon and Cornwall
Dame Daphne du Maurier (Lady Browning) 1907 - 1989 DBE 1969, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature    
May 11 2008 


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The Birds and other Stories

by Daphne du Maurier

Published by Penguin Books 1963, this collection of short stories enabled her devoted readership to see her, for the first time, in a very different guise as an exponent of the sinister and macabre.
  • The Birds
    The idea for this famous story came to her one day when she was walking across to Menabilly Barton farm from the house. She saw a farmer busily ploughing a field whilst above him the seagull s were diving and wheeling. She developed the idea about the birds becoming hostile and attacking him.

    In her story, the birds become hostile after a harsh winter with little food, first the seagull s, then birds of prey and finally even small birds, all turn against mankind.

    The nightmarish idea appealed to Hitchcock who turned it into the celebrated film. Daphne disliked the film and particularly disliked the translation of the setting from Cornwall, with its small fields and stone hedges, to small-town America.
     

  • Monte Verità
     
  • The Apple Tree
     
  • The Little Photographer
     
  • Kiss Me Again, Stranger
     
  • The Old Man

Also published as The Apple Tree by Gollancz in 1952



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