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Fans of nineteenth-century novels should flock to Mary Cholmondeley's Red Pottage. This novel takes an unflinching look at the social conventions and strictures that dictated so many women's life trajectories in the era -- often with less-than-ideal outcomes for everyone involved. Following the lives of several female friends, Red Pottage is a rare gem: an insightful social critique that is a page-turning pleasure to read.

Produktbeschreibung
Fans of nineteenth-century novels should flock to Mary Cholmondeley's Red Pottage. This novel takes an unflinching look at the social conventions and strictures that dictated so many women's life trajectories in the era -- often with less-than-ideal outcomes for everyone involved. Following the lives of several female friends, Red Pottage is a rare gem: an insightful social critique that is a page-turning pleasure to read.

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Autorenporträt
Mary Cholmondeley (1859-1925) was an English novelist. Born in Shropshire, Cholmondeley was raised in a devoutly religious family. When she wasn't helping her mother at home or her father in his work as a Reverend, she devoted herself to writing stories. Her first novel, The Danvers Jewels (1887), initially appeared in serial form in Temple Bar, earning Cholmondeley a reputation as a popular British storyteller. Red Pottage (1899), considered her masterpiece, was a bestselling novel in England and the United States and has been recognized as a pioneering work of satire that considers such themes as religious hypocrisy and female sexuality.