Best Seller
Ebook
Published on Oct 31, 2006 | 240 Pages
Stephen Crane’s first novel is the tale of a pretty young slum girl driven to brutal excesses by poverty and loneliness. It was considered so sexually frank and realistic, that the book had to be privately printed at first. It and GEORGE’S MOTHER, the shorter novel that follows in this edition, were eventually hailed as the first genuine expressions of Naturalism in American letters and established their creator as the American apostle of an artistic revolution which was to alter the shape and destiny of civilization itself.
Author
Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane was born in 1871, in Newark, New Jersey. He attempted college twice, the second time failing a theme-writing course while writing articles for newspapers such as the New York Tribune. In 1892 Crane moved to the poverty of New York City’s Lower East Side—the Bowery so vividly depicted in Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. In 1894 the serial publication began of The Red Badge of Courage, his acclaimed and widely popular novel of a young soldier’s coming of age in the Civil War. He died in Germany at the age of twenty-eight, in June of 1900.
Learn More about Stephen CraneYou May Also Like
The Weary Blues; Not Without Laughter; The Ways of White Folks
Hardcover
$35.00
Not Without Laughter
Trade Paperback
$12.00
The Idiot
Hardcover
$32.00
The Sound and the Fury
Paperback
$8.95
A Farewell to Arms
Paperback
$8.95
A Book for Christmas
Hardcover
$26.00
The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Writings
Hardcover
$30.00
Find Him!
Trade Paperback Original
$19.00
Party Stories
Hardcover
$25.00
×