Constance Fenimore Woolson

- Authors
- Constance Fenimore Woolson
- Publisher
- Library of America
- Date
- 2019-12-21T01:22:34Z
- Size
- 0.81 MB
- Lang
- en
A landmark of literary recovery: the first major edition of an overlooked genius who in her lifetime was considered 19th-centuryAmerica's greatest woman writerIn the eyes of her contemporaries, Constance Fenimore Woolson (1840-1894) ranked with George Eliot as one of the two greatest women writers of the English language. She wrote fiction of remarkable intellectual power that outsold those of her male contemporaries Henry James and Willian Dean Howells. James enshrined memories of his long, complicated friendship with Woolson in The Beast in the Jungle and The Wings of the Dove, and more recently Colm Tobin treated the relationship in his novel The Master. But Woolson's close association with James, and her likely suicide in Venice, have tended to overshadow her own literary accomplishments, pigeonholing her as a martyr to the male literary establishment. This volume, the most comprehensive gathering of Woolson's stories to date,...