Orange is not the only fruit Jeanette is living with her adopted parents in England at the age of seven. Janet's mother is very religious and his father is not around. She was very lonely and stayed home till the age of seven. Her mother was very religious and even taught Janette how to read the Bible. Janet's mother was very religious, so she almost brainwashed her daughter and became a missionary. However, once Janet begins to attend school, the situation changes.
In a young girl who grew up and discovered her sexy stories in a highly religious community, Elsie and her mother are essential for an important role for playing this role. Mothers need to play an important role, what happens if this character is confused with a very mental role? When a young girl's life violates the rules set by society for her, she changes. In addition to the church, Janet was living in shelter and had no influence on her.
Janet Winterthur's epoch-making adult novel Orange is not the only fruit depicting her religious mother as the ultimate toothless tyrant. But in her powerful memoirs, Winterthur created a more complex character, which the author had a long lasting influence even after escaping his path. In the northern part of England, the mother is longing for the demise of the world, and regards the adopted child as a sinner who needs punishment. Her memoir is a difficult investigation of the torture heritage of childhood, the gap of shaking between faith and madness, and the pursuit of life and family of love.
Orange is not the only fruit, Janet Winterthon is not the only fruit until Orange becomes New Black. In 1985, Jeannette Winterson wrote this groundbreaking semi-autobiographical adult novel. This nice, quirky narrator grew up in the Pentecostal community in England. So sewing the sampler using abstract themes, she planned to live as a missionary - and then fall in love with other girls. This is an imaginative and painful story about a creative young woman who is hard to find her voice in the face of intense opposition from her conservative family and community.
Orange is not the only fruit announced by Janet Winterson in 1985. After that, she adapted to the same name BBC drama. This is an adult's story about a lesbian girl who grew up in the British Pentecostal community. The theme of this book is the transition from youth to adult, complex family relationship, homosexual relationship, and religion. This book is semi-autobiographical, based on the life of Winterthon in Aclinton, Lancashire. There, she moved from Manchester, a newborn city. "I wrote a couple of articles about these in Oranges, when my mother announced it, my mother made a note of anger at me." In her 2011 memoir, at the moment Parallel non-imaginary explanation of life? The main character of Orange has the name of the author, but John Moulin thinks that it is neither autobiography nor biography, it is not Kunstre Romant.