

An edition of Charlotte Smith (1998)
a critical biography
By Loraine Fletcher
Publish Date
1998
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Language
eng
Pages
407
Description:
Charlotte Turner Smith (1749-1806) was born into the landed gentry and married off at 15, on the insistence of a hostile stepmother, to a wastrel from a West Indian family whose money came from the slave trade. When her husband's fecklessness forced her to support herself and their nine surviving children alone, she at once became a celebrated poet and novelist. Writing at the time of the French Revolution, she wanted change in England too and commented sharply on the injustice of England's class system, on the legalized looting of Empire and the legal prostitution of arranged marriages. Her Elegiac Sonnets with their lonely landscapes greatly influenced William Wordsworth, while Jane Austen devoured her satirical fiction and adapted her plots and settings for novels of her own. Her personality comes across vividly from her letters, published here for the first time, and from Loraine Fletcher's sympathetic, scholarly narrative.
subjects: Authors, English, Biography, English Authors, History, Women and literature, Smith, Charlotte Turner, 1749-1806., Women and literature -- England -- History -- 18th century., Authors, English -- 18th century -- Biography., Women, biography, Authors, biography, Women authors, Great britain, biography, English Women authors
People: Charlotte Turner Smith (1749-1806)
Places: England
Times: 18th century