Frances Hodgson Burnett
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Part of a photograph
by Herbert Rose Barraud |
FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT (1849-1924) grew up in
Manchester until, in 1865, her widowed mother
was forced to take her children to Tennessee,
the home of Frances's uncle. She married
Swan Burnett in 1873, was the family breadwinner
(her first short story was published in the late
1860s) and had two sons. After her divorce she
was briefly married to her lover: her personal
life was unhappy, but she had numerous friends
on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1877 the Boston
Transcript compared her first novel to the best
of George Eliot and in 1886 Little Lord Fauntleroy
was a huge popular success; from then on Frances
Hodgson Burnett wrote for both children and adults.
The Secret Garden
(1911) is still a bestseller and The
Making of a Marchioness (1901)
has been an out-of-print favourite: Linda in The
Pursuit of Love puts it in the Red bookshop
instead of Karl Marx, and Grace in The Blessing
was absorbed by it on the day her mother died.
We published The
Shuttle in 2007. |