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Elaine
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Oct 15, 2014 07:01AM
The incorporation of early literature written by women into your Karen Pelletier books was one component that really drew me in. Most evident was your scholarly background in these works. Your mysteries truly stand head and shoulders above others in the academic genre. I much enjoyed and learned from THE KASHMIRI SHAWL also. Now to find the time to check on the authors you noted. As an English major in the early seventies, I was not exposed to any of them, with the exception of Dickinson and Stowe, in my coursework.
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Elaine wrote: "The incorporation of early literature written by women into your Karen Pelletier books was one component that really drew me in. Most evident was your scholarly background in these works." I would hope that scholarship and reading pleasure do not cancel each other out! When I did research into women authors such as Emma Southworth and Fanny Osgood, I was struck by the ways in which their lives and works incorporated all the powerful experiences and themes of love, loss, anger, resentment, hope, ambition, and passion that we expect to find in compelling literature. Could it be possible, I asked myself, that because the women's treatment of those themes did not involve deer hunters, whaling captains, and boys rafting the Mississippi River, that early (read, male) scholars simply did not recognize their power? Hmm...The Hidden Hand, Dickinson and the Strategies of Reticence: The Woman Writer in Nineteenth-Century America


