Fr. 39.50

Cradle of the Deep - The Grand Adventures of Joan Lowell that Were Not Quite True

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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First published in 1929, Cradle of the Deep was the bestselling book that became a
scandal!

In 1923, Joan Lowell was an aspiring writer
and rising silent film star in Hollywood. Young, beautiful, and talented, she
was adored by all. Then she published her autobiography in 1929: a rip-roaring
memoir of a young girl growing up on a schooner with her hearty sea captain
father and a crew of salty sailors and the incredible and death-defying
adventures she had traveling the world.

Except...none of it was true!

Born in 1902 in Berkeley, California as Helen
Wagner to a middle-class family. Yes, her father was a Pacific Ocean merchant
schooner captain. And yes, he took Joan-and her mother-on a 15-month sailing
adventure when she was a girl. After knocking around odd jobs in San Francisco,
young Helen moved to Los Angeles to take acting lessons and began her career.
Her early notable roles were in pirate movies as either the intrepid heroine or
damsel in distress.

She published her "autobiography" which became
a runaway best-seller in 1929. But a few months later, the truth was revealed.
She had never left the shores of California! Amidst the scandal, Joan remained
defiant, telling the Pittsburgh Press in 1930, "Eighty percent of it was true and the rest I colored
up. I made some changes to protect people and the rest to make it better
reading. That's an author's privilege."

This edition features archival photos and press clippings and a short biography of Joan Lowell and her infamous book.


About the author










Joan Lowell was born in
Berkeley on November 23rd, 1902 as Helen Wagner. Her film career began in 1919
at Goldwyn Studios, where she worked as an extra. She can be spotted in Souls
for Sale
 (1923), a delightful comedy-drama about the movie business. After Souls
for Sale,
 Joan appeared in a handful of films, and her career seemed to
be going places. In 1925 an uncredited Joan plays a friend of the film’s
heroine in Charlie Chaplin’s The Gold Rush. This was Joan Lowell’s last
film work for almost a decade. In 1927, she married playwright Thompson
Buchanan, but the marriage barely lasted two years. After divorcing Buchanan, she penned her infamous ‘autobiography’, Cradle of the Deep, a Book
of the Month club selection that shifted over 100,000 copies.

D. W. Griffith was
eager to produce a big screen adaptation of Cradle, but when the
truth came out his plans went by the wayside. Joan later sold the film rights
to tiny Van Beuren Studios. The result was 1934’s Adventure Girl,
an outrageous road-show feature shot on location in Guatemala. Joan narrates
and appears on screen as a feisty gal eager to plunge into the jungles of
Central America in search of lost cities and forgotten treasures.

Aside from her film
career, Joan Lowell worked as a tabloid reporter and continued to write books—including
Reporter Gal (1933) and Promised Land (1952). In addition to
writing, she ran a large coffee plantation in Brazil from 1936 until her death
in 1967.


Summary

First published in 1929, Cradle of the Deep was the bestselling book that became a
scandal!

In 1923, Joan Lowell was an aspiring writer
and rising silent film star in Hollywood. Young, beautiful, and talented, she
was adored by all. Then she published her autobiography in 1929: a rip-roaring
memoir of a young girl growing up on a schooner with her hearty sea captain
father and a crew of salty sailors and the incredible and death-defying
adventures she had traveling the world.


Except…none of it was true!

Born in 1902 in Berkeley, California as Helen
Wagner to a middle-class family. Yes, her father was a Pacific Ocean merchant
schooner captain. And yes, he took Joan—and her mother—on a 15-month sailing
adventure when she was a girl. After knocking around odd jobs in San Francisco,
young Helen moved to Los Angeles to take acting lessons and began her career.
Her early notable roles were in pirate movies as either the intrepid heroine or
damsel in distress.


She published her “autobiography” which became
a runaway best-seller in 1929. But a few months later, the truth was revealed.
She had never left the shores of California! Amidst the scandal, Joan remained
defiant, telling the Pittsburgh Press in 1930,
 "Eighty percent of it was true and the rest I colored
up. I made some changes to protect people and the rest to make it better
reading. That's an author's privilege.


This edition features archival photos and press clippings and a short biography of Joan Lowell and her infamous book.

Foreword


  • Book launch and film screening in Los Angeles. Details to come.

  • Outreach to feminist press. (Lux Magazine, Jezebel, Ms. Magazine, The Women's Review of Books)
  • Outreach to Public Domain Review, Lost Ladies of Lit Podcast, Vintage Hollywood.

  • Endorsements from notables in Hollywood history and publishing. (Alison Martino, Laura Albert (JT Leroy), Ann Magnuson)
  • Digital ARC available.

Product details

Authors Joan Lowell, Lowell Joan
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 09.05.2023
 
EAN 9781627311410
ISBN 978-1-62731-141-0
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History

FICTION / Women, FICTION / Action & Adventure, FICTION / Sea Stories, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Adventurers & Explorers, Classic fiction

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