A Modern Mephistopheles and Taming a Tartar
By (Author) Louisa May Alcott
Introduction and notes by Madelein B. Stern
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
10th August 1987
United States
Tertiary Education
Fiction
Literary essays
818.409
Paperback
437
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
822g
Louisa May Alcott has always been associated with literature for young adults and children. Here is in effect a new book by the universally popular Alcott, a book that reveals an altogether different image of one of America's best-loved authors. A Modern Mephistopheles began as a rejected sensational novel and was revised by Alcott for anonymous publication in 1877. Its subject, style, and language mark radical deviations from those expected of Alcott. Taming a Tartar is a newly discovered Alcott thriller. Originally published as a serialization in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Magazine, this astounding page-turner highlights Alcott's feminists leanings. This unique book marks the first general printing of an Alcott story and the first reprinting in some 75 years of a neglected Alcott novel. Both works are closely analyzed in the detailed introduction by Madeleine B. Stern.
MADELEIN B. STERN is one of the world's leading authorities on antiquarian books.