The Collected Short Works, 1907-1919In the first half of the twentieth century Bess Streeter Aldrich became one of America’s best loved, most widely read, and highly paid writers. Her short works appeared in such major journals as Ladies Home Journal, Harper’s Weekly, The American Magazine, Colliers, McCalls, and The Saturday Evening Post. Her most famous novel, A Lantern in Her Hand, has remained a favorite since first published in 1928. Her portrayals of pioneers, farm people, small-town residents, their activities, and their relationship with their surroundings won the admiration of the nation. Honest romance, marital concord, and parental love were her constant themes. She was much more concerned with what kept people together than with what drove them apart. Widowed in 1925 with four children who relied on her for support, Aldrich knew all too well the tensions between motherhood and working for pay. Collected Short Works contains twenty-six works written for publication between 1907 and 1919. Aldrich’s admirers now have ready access to works that long ago were relegated to archives and library stacks. Scholars will appreciate how much of herself Aldrich invested in her fiction and how well she appreciated the changes occurring around her. |
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Page 25
... Wife : Is My Husband Ashamed of Me ? ( Mrs. C. A. , Nebraska ) The November 1912 Ladies World carried an article titled " Why I Am Ashamed of My Wife " ; the following Febru- ary ( 1913 ) the editors acknowledged that in response to it ...
... Wife : Is My Husband Ashamed of Me ? ( Mrs. C. A. , Nebraska ) The November 1912 Ladies World carried an article titled " Why I Am Ashamed of My Wife " ; the following Febru- ary ( 1913 ) the editors acknowledged that in response to it ...
Page 35
... Wife asked earnestly . She was a faded little woman with a face of haunting wistfulness . " Speak for yourself , Sadie , but I know one that wasn't , " and the Farmer's Wife laughed good - naturedly with a characteristic little ...
... Wife asked earnestly . She was a faded little woman with a face of haunting wistfulness . " Speak for yourself , Sadie , but I know one that wasn't , " and the Farmer's Wife laughed good - naturedly with a characteristic little ...
Page 36
... Wife through her own and was calling her Sadie . The latter looked more faded than ever in contrast to her well - groomed companion , but she carried herself with a certain little queenly air that all the made - over garments of all the ...
... Wife through her own and was calling her Sadie . The latter looked more faded than ever in contrast to her well - groomed companion , but she carried herself with a certain little queenly air that all the made - over garments of all the ...
Contents
The Madonna of the Purple Dots | 1 |
The Little House Next Door | 9 |
My Life Test | 20 |
Copyright | |
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