3 Quotes & Sayings By Margaret Kennedy

Born in 1872, Margaret Kennedy was raised in New Jersey. She earned a master's degree at age forty and became one of America's best-selling romance writers. Her novels were translated into thirty-two languages and sold over 100 million copies worldwide. She was the author of more than 20 novels and two memoirs, as well as a screenplay called "Glamour." In 1971, Mrs Read more

Kennedy donated her entire estate to the University of Maine. The Margaret Kennedy Library is a center for creativity and self-expression for women, providing a place that encourages reading and writing, as well as other creative activities including ceramics, painting, photography, and art classes.

1
When they got to their hotel she went straight up to bed, but he paused to get a drink. There was, in the vestibule, a flower stall and he bought a handful of roses, stiffly wired into a bouquet, before proceeding to the oppressive gorgeousness of their bridal suite. The lift was lined with looking glass, so that as he shot upwards he got an endlessly duplicated version of himself, stout and nervous, a light cloak flung over his shoulder and flowers in his hand: an infinitely long row of gentlemen carrying offerings to an unforgiving past. Margaret Kennedy
2
He became so gloomy that she asked him, at last, if he was worried about anything. He assured her, instantly, that he was the happiest man in the world. And he was. At times he was almost bewildered by his own bliss in being there, with Tony, so terribly dear, beside him; really his own for the rest of his life. It was not her fault if the insatiable sorrows of an unequal love tormented him, the hungry demand for more, for a fuller return, for a feeling which it was not in her nature to give. As she leaned forward, absorbed in the passions staged beneath her, he felt suddenly that their box contained just himself and a wraith, a ghost; as if the real Antonia, whom he loved, was an imagined woman living only in his sad fancy. Margaret Kennedy