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Paperback, 2nd Revised edition
Published: 8th May 2000
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Published: 20th September 2011
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Published: 1st April 2003
Paperback, Bonded Leather
Published: 1st April 2019
The Awakening & Other Stories
By (Author) Kate Chopin
Introduction by J. Michelle Coghlan
Pan Macmillan
Macmillan Collector's Library
11th September 2018
6th September 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Short stories
Modern and Contemporary romance
813.4
Hardback
408
Width 102mm, Height 158mm, Spine 21mm
240g
Designed to appeal to the booklover, the Macmillan Collector's Library is a series of beautiful gift editions of much loved classic titles. Macmillan Collector's Library are books to love and treasure. Readers and critics were scandalized by The Awakening when it was first published, but it is now regarded as among the boldest and earliest examples of feminist fiction. It is published here with a selection of Chopin's strikingly perceptive short stories and introduced by Dr J. Michelle Coghlan, a specialist in American literature. In The Awakening, Edna Pontellier is on holiday with her husband and two young children at a sleepy resort town on the Louisiana Gulf Coast. There, she is pursued by the charming and unmarried Robert Lebrun. Edna doesn't play by the rules; flirtation turns into an affair that awakens in Edna her desire to break away from her passionless marriage, her children and the strict conventions of nineteenth-century society.
From the first pages of The Awakening we are pulled into territory that feels utterly current and familiar, with an undercurrent more dangerous than romantic comedy * Guardian *
Kate Chopin is a pioneer in the treatment of sexuality in American literature . . . She does not speak only to women, but she speaks most powerfully about them * The Times *
A Creole Bovary is this little novel of Miss Chopins -- Willa Cather
Chopins deceptively slight novel is the kind of book revolutions are made of * Harpers Bazaar *
This landmark feminist novel, first published in 1899, remains startlingly relevant -- Judy Blume
Kate Chopin was born in St. Louis in 1850 to a Creole mother and an Irish father. Educated at St Louis' Sacred Heart Academy, Chopin went on to reject her Catholic faith and embraced a free-thinking philosophy inspired by writers such as Darwin and Huxley. In 1870 she married Oscar Chopin, who died in 1882 of yellow fever. A widow at only 32 with six children, she eventually moved home to St Louis where she began writing fiction. She completed three novels and close to one hundred short stories which were published in prominent magazines such as Atlantic Monthly and Vogue. She died in 1904.