She was immoral and scandalous in her day for treating women's sexuality and desire from a too natural and uninhibited point of view for the time. Lady Chatterley's lover is in all fairness the most celebrated and celebrated novel by D. H. Lawrence. The passage of time and the social conquests have lightened the book of the burden of its supposed controversy, but they have not eclipsed an iota the brilliance of its beauty. Constance Chatterley, daughter of intellectuals with socialist ideals and educated in an artistic environment, contracts with Clifford, a young person of high class who is fighting in the front, taking advantage of a few days that this one has of permission. Shortly thereafter, Sir Clifford, who has inherited the family home and business, returns to the paraplegic home. This fact, which over the years will only exacerbate the already cold and cerebral character of C...read more