- Title: Fanny Stevenson Muse, Adventuress & Romantic Enigma
- Author: Alexandra Lapierre
- Translator: Carol Cosman
- Year Published: 1995/This Edition: 1996 (Fourth Estate)
- Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
- About: This book was my introduction to Fanny Stevenson, the wife and widow of Robert Louis Stevenson. Lapierre’s wonderful, detailed and complex biography neatly answers two questions: Why did the great Scots writer fall in love with, and sacrifice so much for, this unknown, controversial American woman? Who, exactly, was Fanny Vandegrift Osbourne? In order to explicate on the great mystery that is the former, Lapierre goes to impressive lengths of research to figure out the latter. In answering these questions, it is obvious that the subject and her extraordinary life would have been worth the resultant biography even had she never met and married the writer of the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Treasure Island and Kidnapped. As a plucky, resourceful, intelligent, resilient and talented woman, she emerges as much more than just a ‘great man’s’ muse.
- Motivation: I love obscure artistic ladies, especially when they are armed with an excessive amount of fighting spirit and intelligence.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 272: “Fifteen years later, on the eve of his own death, Robert Louis Stevenson described his wife to one of his friends: Hellish energy relieved by fortnights of entire hibernation…Doctors everybody, will doctor you, cannot be doctored herself.“
- Happiness Scale: 10
Interesting. We often don’t think about the spouses and families of famous people, who may have wonderful stories/lives of their own.
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I agree. It is a concept close to my heart. I write a lot about obscure or forgotten female writers, artists and other creative types. Many of them were the daughters, sisters or wives of much more noted men. Their stories deserve to be told.
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