by Paula Blanchard (Author)
Best known for her masterpiece, The Country of the Pointed Firs, Sarah Orne Jewett (1849-1909) is a writer with enormous resonance for our time. Our fascination with place, with traditional values, and our yearning for a rural utopia all find fulfillment in Jewett's portrayal of the "grand and simple lives" of coastal Maine. In this delicious portrait, Paula Blanchard (biographer of Margaret Fuller and Emily Carr) plunges us into New England literary life in turn-of-the-century Boston, into the circles of Henry James, Lowell, Howell, Whittier, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. She delves into Jewett's close friendships with women, from the young Willa Cather and the flamboyant "Mrs. Jack" Gardner, and especially to Annie Fields, her partner in a sustaining "Boston marriage." Her enthralling and insightful glimpses into Jewett's fiction will send readers racing back to a writer of whose work Kipling said "it is the very life."
Author Biography
Paula Blanchard is the author of two highly acclaimed biographies: Margaret Fuller: From Transcendentalism to Revolution and The Life of Emily Carr, which was a selection of the Canadian Book of the Month Club and won the University of British Columbia's Award for Canadian Biography. She lives in Lexington, Massachusetts, and has spent much of her life near the coastal New England world of the pointed firs.
Number of Pages: 416
Dimensions: 0.89 x 8.8 x 6.32 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: September 13, 2002