
Elizabeth Waterston is a 2011 Fellow of The Royal Society of Canada.In the 1920s, L.M. Montgomery is in mature mid-life, and her personal and professional lives are becoming even more complex. Montgomery juggles the demands of motherhood, parish obligations, indifferent household help, grief at the loss of older friends and family, and appeals by her P.E.I. clan for advice and assistance. There are also triumphs and trials more closely related to her position as a best-selling author: growing fame, the successful launch of her new heroines 'Emily' and 'Marigold', the struggle to allocate time for correspondence with publishers and fans -- and actually to write.We trace the happy conclusion of her lawsuits against an unscrupulous publisher, and the disappointing outcome of the tempest-in-a-teapot suit arising from a minor automobile accident. There are more personal worries: the Rev. Ewan Macdonald's envy of his wife's publishing and social success; the dark shadow cast by his recurrent attacks of religious melancholia; her concern lest their sons show similar tendencies. This volume of her journals shows Montgomery to be a complex, sensitive, successful and surprisingly contemporary writer.
This volume investigates the intersection of L.M. Montgomery’s private domestic struggles and her public identity as a prolific, best-selling author during the 1920s. Editors Elizabeth Waterston and Mary H. Rubio utilize these primary source journals to document the psychological and professional pressures Montgomery faced during her mid-life years. The text provides a framework for understanding the author’s navigation of marital discord, religious melancholia within her household, and the complex legal battles surrounding her literary career. By presenting these entries, the editors offer a candid look at the reality behind the public persona of a celebrated writer.
What You Will Find
Scholars and readers frequently note the academic rigor and meticulous annotation provided by Waterston and Rubio in this collection. Experts highlight this volume as a foundational text for understanding the private anxieties and professional complexities of L.M. Montgomery’s later life.
Page Count:
472
Publication Date:
2014-12-10
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195418026
ISBN-13:
9780195418026
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