I'm teaching American Literature I online for the first time in the fall. I am adapting my "Traveling the Novel" project for this class and chose "The Coquette" for the sample project I like to provide my students. This short epistolary novel was the perfect choice because Foster is the first American novelist, and she published her book in 1789.
It's interesting to note that in 1790, Jane Austen, at 14, also wrote an epistolary novel, entitled "Love and Freindship [sic]." The epistolary form was popular for these early novels, so there is probably no connection, but it is interesting to note that Austen's work lampoons overt sensibility and Foster's is more of a caveat against it.
Although many similarities can be drawn between Austen and Foster, especially the social life of the lower upper class or emerging middle class, Austen's work is distinctly British while Foster's is equally as distinctly American. It is interesting to get a woman's perspective on life in early post-revolutionary America.
The role of the tabloid press, already present in 18th Century America, is also an interesting aspect of this novel's background and is discussed in some of the essays in this Norton critical edition, which also includes some of the actually letters of Elizabeth Whitman, the real life woman on whom Foster based her tragic heroine.
The literary tour I am planning around this novel and its author is shaping up to be an interesting trip that I may just have to take for real!