"Scribbling Women": True Tales from Astonishing Lives by Marthe Jocelyn

"Scribbling Women": True Tales from Astonishing Lives

Marthe Jocelyn
Tundra Books
Mar 2011
Hardcover
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In 1855, Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote to his publisher, complaining about the irritating fad of “scribbling women.” Whether they were written by professionals, by women who simply wanted to connect with others, or by those who wanted to leave a record of their lives, those “scribbles” are fascinating, informative, and instructive.Margaret Catchpole was a transported prisoner whose eleven letters provide the earliest record of white settlement in Australia. Writing hundreds of years later, Aboriginal writer Doris Pilkington-Garimara wrote a novel about another kind of exile in Australia. Young Isabella Beeton, one of twenty-one children and herself the mother of four, managed to write a groundbreaking cookbook before she died at the age of twenty-eight.
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About this book
Publisher Tundra Books
Published 2011
Readers 0