Judith Krantz Popular Books

Judith Krantz Biography & Facts

Judith Krantz (née Tarcher; January 9, 1928–June 22, 2019) was an American magazine writer, fashion editor, and novelist. Her first novel Scruples (1978) was a New York Times best-seller and was translated into 50 languages. Scruples, which describes the glamorous and affluent world of high fashion in Beverly Hills, California, helped define a new sub-genre of the romance novel - the bonkbuster or "sex-and-shopping" novel. She also became one of the first celebrity authors through her extensive touring and promotion. Her later books included Princess Daisy (1980), Till We Meet Again (1988), Dazzle (1990) and Spring Collection (1996). Her autobiography, Sex and Shopping: The Confessions of a Nice Jewish Girl, was published in 2000. Biography Early years Judith Bluma-Gittel Tarcher was born on January 9, 1928, in New York City, the daughter of Mary (Braeger), a Lithuanian-born attorney, and Jack D. Tarcher, an advertising executive. Her family was Jewish. The "youngest, smartest, and shortest girl" in her year, she graduated from the Birch Wathen School at age 16. Krantz then enrolled at Wellesley College. Krantz told The Boston Globe in 1982 that she attended Wellesley with three goals: to date, to read every novel in the library, and to graduate. "Torchy", as her dormmates named her, held the dorm dating record as the only one to have 13 consecutive dates with 13 different men. Her grades were not as impressive as her extracurricular activities. Krantz earned one A-plus in English, but had a B− average in her major and C average in everything else. Krantz had the opportunity to improve her marks when she took a short-story class during her sophomore year. Although the professor enjoyed her writing, he refused to give her an A because she had poor spelling, and he thought the B would teach her a lesson. Krantz claims to have learned the lesson well—she did not write fiction again for 31 years. After graduating from Wellesley in 1948, Krantz moved to Paris, where she worked in fashion public relations. She enjoyed attending elegant parties, borrowing couture gowns, and meeting prominent people such as Marlene Dietrich, Orson Welles and Hubert de Givenchy. Magazines The following year, Krantz returned to New York City, where began a career in magazine journalism. She worked in the fiction department at Good Housekeeping before being promoted to fashion editor and having the opportunity to write several articles for the magazine. In 1953 Krantz attended a Fourth of July party hosted by her high school friend, Barbara Walters. There she met the future film and television producer Steve Krantz. The two were married the following year, on February 19, 1954. Three years later, she gave birth to their first son, and she gave up her full-time job, choosing instead to write part-time from home. She wrote many freelance articles for Maclean's, McCall's, Ladies' Home Journal, and Cosmopolitan. Her best-known article was "The Myth of the Multiple Orgasm", which was published in Cosmopolitan. Her magazine career gave Krantz an opportunity to interview many prominent women. Novels In 1976, Krantz's husband decided to take flying lessons. Krantz chose to join him, despite the fact that she was afraid of flying. Having conquered that fear, she determined to face her other fears. For the first time since college, she attempted to write fiction. Although her husband had been insisting for years that she was a natural storyteller, Krantz believed that she was writing the book simply to prove to him that she was not able to write good fiction. She completed her first novel, Scruples, nine months later. The year it was published, 1978, Krantz turned 50. The books were not copyrighted under her own name but by Steve Krantz Productions. Scruples reached the number one spot on The New York Times bestseller list. There were two sequels: Scruples Two (1992) and Lovers (1994). Her second novel, Princess Daisy, followed in 1980 and netted her $5 million before its publication. It also became a number one best seller, with the paperback rights selling for a then-record $3.2 million. It concerns the fabulously wealthy and glamorous Daisy, daughter of a Russian prince, who has to confront and overcome many harsh realities. The book is notable for having received one of the most scathing reviews ever written, by Clive James. Krantz continued her run of success with Mistral's Daughter (1982) (a multi-generational saga) and I'll Take Manhattan (1986), (about writer and socialite Maxi Amberville, a thinly disguised portrait of the author). Till We Meet Again (1988) which starts in the music halls of 1910s Paris and continues on until after the Second World War, was the last to make the annual top ten bestseller lists, though the later novels continued to be popular. Spring Collection (1996) returns to the world of fashion, while The Jewels of Tessa Kent (1998) explores mother-daughter relationships; Krantz reportedly had a difficult relationship with her own mother. She retired from writing that year at the age of 70, saying she had nothing left to say to her readers. Over 80 million copies of her books are in print in over 50 languages. Seven of her novels have also been adapted for television (as either films or mini-series), with her husband having served as executive producer for some of them. She also wrote one original mini-series for television, Judith Krantz's "Secrets", in 1992. Family Krantz served on the advisory board of Compassion & Choices, an organization dedicated to providing choices for the dying. In 2006, she joined the Board of the Los Angeles Music Center. Krantz's husband, Steve Krantz, died in 2007 of pneumonia. The couple had two sons, Tony Krantz and Nicholas Krantz, both of whom reside in the Los Angeles area. Krantz was the sister-in-law of children's entertainer and television host Shari Lewis, who was married to Krantz's brother, Jeremy P. Tarcher, publisher of nonfiction books on health, psychology and New Age spirituality. Jeremy's daughter, Krantz's niece, is entertainer Mallory Lewis. Death Krantz died on June 22, 2019, at her home in the Bel Air neighborhood of Los Angeles. Works Novels Scruples (1978) (adapted as a 1980 miniseries) Princess Daisy (1980) (adapted as a 1983 miniseries) Mistral's Daughter (1982) (adapted as a 1984 miniseries) I'll Take Manhattan (1986) (adapted as a 1987 miniseries) Till We Meet Again (1988) (adapted as a 1989 miniseries) Dazzle (1990) (adapted as a 1995 miniseries) Scruples Two (1992) Lovers (1994) Spring Collection (1996) The Jewels of Tessa Kent (1998) Non-fiction Sex and Shopping: The Confessions of a Nice Jewish Girl (2000) (autobiography) Original television work Judith Krantz's "Secrets" (1992 TV mini-series, not based on a source novel) Torch Song (1993) (adapted as a 1993 made-for-TV movie) References External links Judith Krantz at IMDb Hughes, Sarah. 'What trashy novels taught me about life', Observer Book.... Discover the Judith Krantz popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Judith Krantz books.

Best Seller Judith Krantz Books of 2024

  • Jacques Tati synopsis, comments

    Jacques Tati

    David Bellos

    The full story of one of France's greatest cinema legends, a clown whose filmmaking innovation was to turn everyday life into an art form.Jacques Tati's Monsieur Hulot, unmistakabl...

  • Scruples Two synopsis, comments

    Scruples Two

    Judith Krantz

    Scruples, Judith Krantz's  electrifying, world wide bestseller appeared fifteen  years ago and made book publishing history. Now  that unforgettable s...

  • Scruples synopsis, comments

    Scruples

    Judith Krantz

    Scruples is the novel that  created publishing history, the firstand widely  acknowledged to be the very bestnovel ever written  about the staggeringl...

  • The Dearest And The Best synopsis, comments

    The Dearest And The Best

    Leslie Thomas

    In the spring of 1940, the spectre of war turned into grim reality. And on the English home front, men, women and children found themselves swept into a maelstrom of fear and uncer...

  • Lovers synopsis, comments

    Lovers

    Judith Krantz

    Lovers is pure Krantz, an  intoxicating dance of love lost, stolen, and found  among women and men who lure each other with potent  combinations of mo...

  • Princess Daisy synopsis, comments

    Princess Daisy

    Judith Krantz

    “With unfailing panache and a style that swoops from crisply cynical to downright voluptuous, Princess Daisy is a guaranteed winner.”CosmopolitanShe was born Princess Mar...

  • Secrets in the Dark synopsis, comments

    Secrets in the Dark

    Ceril Campbell

    The ultimate glamorous, escapist blockbuster perfect for fans of Melanie Blake, Jackie Collins and Shirley Conran's Lace.'Just the kind of glamorous escapism we all desperately ne...

  • The Jewels of Tessa Kent synopsis, comments

    The Jewels of Tessa Kent

    Judith Krantz

    For the first time Judith Krantz has chosen to tell a story rooted in the shattering emotions of a motherdaughter relationship gone desperately wrong. The story unfolds on a classi...

  • Till We Meet Again synopsis, comments

    Till We Meet Again

    Judith Krantz

    Eve dared. . . Eve, with passion that overruled her total innocence, ran away from home to live in unrepentant sin; won stardom singing on the stage of the Parisian music halls bef...

  • Dazzle synopsis, comments

    Dazzle

    Judith Krantz

    “Captivating. Krantz’s latest tome . . . is her most erotic yet. Dazzle sizzles.”Los Angeles Daily News Now, Judith Krantz, bestselling author of Scruples, Mis...

  • Spring Collection synopsis, comments

    Spring Collection

    Judith Krantz

    PASSION...In a tale as timely as Scruples, as compelling as Dazzle, as intriguing as Mistral's Daughter, Judith Krantz launches three innocentbeauties on the city of fashion and lo...

  • In A Province synopsis, comments

    In A Province

    Sir Laurens van der Post

    Last year the rain went away. It became very dry; there was no water and the sun killed the crops of my father. Leaving the kraal and misty Valley of a Thousand Hills, Kenon has co...