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A Wilder Shore: The Romantic Odyssey of Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson
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86/99
Critics
52/99
Readers
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Scholars
82/99
Rating
89/99
Volume
39/99
Rating
65/99
Volume
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About This Book
A portrait of the fascinating, unusual and fruitful creative partnership between Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson The romance between Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson was an unlikely Victorian love he was an ambitious but drifting college-educated writer from a prominent family in Scotland; she was a forceful and determined farm girl from Indiana with a high school education. She was married, with children, and 10 years his senior when they met in France in 1876. How could a union between them work? A Wilder Shore is a portrait of these two extraordinary people and a nuanced examination of the improbable union that stimulated, frustrated and ultimately sustained them. The book travels the world with the couple as they seek better health for him, a looser lifestyle and more creative freedom, beginning in an art colony outside Paris and ending in Samoa, where they lived and joined the native islanders' fight for independence from imperialist powers. Along the way, the ferment of the Stevensons' deeply loving but stormy marriage produced literary masterpieces by Robert such as Treasure Island, Kidnapped and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. This sweeping love story of Fanny and Robert Louis Stevenson and their search for freedom and self-discovery opens up new perspectives on both writers, as well as showing how astonishingly modern they were for their times.
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Reviews
"Her richly researched and vivid double portrait makes a convincing case that Fanny pulled off a rare feat, enabling Louis's genius to mature while releasing his boyish energies ..."
"For all her clear-eyed rigor, Peri writes with a palpable affection for her subjects ..."
"A richly detailed chronicle of two eventful lives."
"accords it respect ..."
"With this fine book...Peri convincingly argues that there was nothing remotely ordinary about either of these people — who went to the well so often that there was no water left when they were finished."
"Lively and substantive ..."
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