I recently read and reviewed Flight of the Falcon and Rule Britannia as well as the book in my previous post and then realised that although I thought that I had read just about everything which Daphne du Maurier wrote, I was far from correct.
I don’t want to join any more reading challenges, but I want to keep a track of how many I have read, and I hope to add quite a few more to my list before the end of the year.
She also wrote quite a few non-fiction books but I’m going to concentrate on the fiction for the moment.
* The Loving Spirit (1931)
* I’ll Never Be Young Again (1932)
* The Progress of Julius (1933) (later re-published as Julius)
* Jamaica Inn (1936)
* Rebecca (1938)
* Rebecca (1940) (play—du Maurier’s own stage adaptation of her novel)
* Happy Christmas (1940) (short story)
* Come Wind, Come Weather (1940) (short story collection)
* Frenchman’s Creek (1941)
* Hungry Hill (1943)
* The Years Between (1945) (play)
* The King’s General (1946)
* September Tide (1948) (play)
* The Parasites (1949)
* My Cousin Rachel (1951)
* The Apple Tree (1952) (short story collection, AKA Kiss Me Again, Stranger)
* Mary Anne (1954)
* The Scapegoat (1957)
* Early Stories (1959) (short story collection, stories written between 1927–1930[14])
* The Breaking Point (1959) (short story collection, AKA The Blue Lenses)
* Castle Dor (1961) (with Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch[15])
* The Birds and Other Stories (1963) (republication of The Apple Tree[16])
* The Glass-Blowers (1963)
* The Flight of the Falcon (1965)
* The House on the Strand (1969)
* Not After Midnight (1971) (short story collection, AKA Don’t Look Now[17])
* Rule Britannia (1972)
* “The Rendezvous and Other Stories” (1980) (short story collection)