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Sister Novelists: The Trailblazing Porter Sisters, Who Paved the Way for Austen and the Brontës
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57/99
Critics
58/99
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Scholars
62/99
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52/99
Volume
95/99
Rating
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About This Book
For readers of Prairie Fires and The Peabody Sisters, a fascinating, insightful biography of the most famous sister novelists before the Brontës. Before the Brontë sisters picked up their pens, or Jane Austen's heroines Elizabeth and Jane Bennet became household names, the literary world was celebrating a different pair of sisters: Jane and Anna Maria Porter. The Porters-exact contemporaries of Jane Austen-were brilliant, attractive, self-made single women of polite reputation who between them published 26 books and achieved global fame. They socialized among the rich and famous, tried to hide their family's considerable debt, and fell dramatically in and out of love. Their moving letters to each other confess every detail. Because the celebrity sisters expected their renown to live on, they preserved their papers, and the secrets they contained, for any biographers to come. But history hasn't been kind to the Porters. Their literary reputation gradually fell away, their letters languished, and no biographer materialized for a century and a half. Now, Professor Devoney Looser, a Guggenheim fellow in English Literature, sets out to re-introduce the world to the authors who cleared the way for Austen, Mary Shelley, and the Brontë sisters. Capturing the Porter sisters' incredible rise, from when Anna Maria published her first book at age 14 in 1793, through to Jane's fall from the pinnacle of fame in the Victorian era, and then to the auctioning off for a pittance of the family's massive archive, Sister Novelists is a groundbreaking and enthralling biography of two pioneering geniuses in historical fiction.
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Reviews
"Perhaps not all of their books would pass muster with modern readers: Ms."
"Looser has ferreted out many wonderful lines from the vast correspondence between the sisters ..."
"How much a reader enjoys these passages depends on the level of their interest in exchanges such as Maria's with a young painter, Thomas Kearsley, she thinks may be interested in her ..."
"Looser plunges into the Porter sisters' letters and excavates their lives to pull them out of obscurity and restore their legacy."
"offers plenty of insights into late-18th- and 19th-century social history."
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