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Ernest Linwood; Or, the Inner Life of the Author

Published
Nov 2007
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
456

About This Book

Caroline Lee Whiting Hentz (1800-1856) was an American novelist and author, most noted for her opposition to the abolitionist movement and her widely-read rebuttal to the popular anti-slavery book Uncle Tom's Cabin. She was a major literary figure in her day, and helped advance women's fiction. Caroline Hentz in her everyday life was almost identical to her pro-abolitionist adversary Harriet Beecher Stowe. "The Planter's Northern Bride, " published in 1854 in Philadelphia, would be Hentz's last published and most widely known work before her death two years later. In this body of work, Caroline Hentz came to the definitive defense of slavery. Hentz used her expertise, having lived for many years in the South, to claim that she was more knowledgeable about slavery than Stowe. Hentz wrote about the caring relationship between master and slave, a Southern opinion on slavery that strongly contrasted with the New England-bred Stowe's characterization of the institution. Her other works include Ernest Linwood; or, The Inner Life of the Author (1856) and The Lost Daughter (1857).

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First Edition Nov 2007 Dodo Press ISBN 1406543225
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Aug 2017 Createspace ISBN 1974396843
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May 2012 ISBN B0082XBO8O
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Aug 2014 HardPress Publishing ISBN B00MSBZZEU
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Jun 2016 HardPress ISBN B018PJ6A4W
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Jan 2018 ISBN B078RTWW87
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