Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft by Lyndall Gordon

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: May 2005
  • 576pp

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    Detailed Rating: "Research" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2005
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Hardcover, 576pp

    Synopsis

    Wollstonecraft's bolt of lightening, her Vindication of the Rights of Women, came fairly early in her short life. She lived the rest of it much as she saw fit, whether by supporting herself as a writer, sharing life with the artist Imlay, observing the beginnings of the first French republic first-hand, or marrying the hitherto unmarriageable Godwin. However, we know all this. Gordon (literature, Oxford U.) goes beneath and beyond the obvious and finds that Wollstonecraft was not being shocking for its own sake, but instead operated from an innate and strong integrity and true curiosity about what, exactly, are women, and what, exactly, are they to do. She finds interesting connections between Wollstonecraft and the American revolutionaries and a panoply of writers asking the same questions about womanhood as did Wollstonecraft. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

    The New York Times - Toni Bentley

    In her wonderful, and deeply sobering, new book, Lyndall Gordon, the distinguished biographer of T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Brontė and Henry James, tackles this formidable woman with grace, clarity and much new research. Despite occasional slips into strangely purple prose (when she reproaches her lover, ''retorts -- great sprays of indignant eloquence -- would fountain from her opening throat''), Gordon relates Wollstonecraft's story with the same potent mixture of passion and reason her subject personified.

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    Biography

    Lyndall Gordon lives in Oxford, England. She is the author of highly acclaimed biographies of Virginia Woolf, Charlotte BrontË, T. S. Eliot, and Henry James. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Senior Research Fellow at St. Hilda's College, Oxford.

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    "Frankenstein's" Grandmotherby Anonymous

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    March 10, 2009: Although the monster in Mary Shelley's novel was not named Frankenstein, readers usually associate that name with him that way. If you are fascinated with the life of Mary Godwin Shelley and her cohorts who created monstrous stories on a stormy night, you will want to delve further into her background, particularly that of her mother, Mary Woolstonecraft. Frankenstein (the monster, that is) was definitly 'born' out of Mary Shelley's life and background. I also recommend "The Monster: Mary Shelley and the Curse of Frankenstein".