A gripping meditation on identity and the shadows we carry, Ernest Linwood returns to the shelf as a necessary, modern reimagining of a timeless classic. A tale that binds mystery, motive, and moral reform into a single, compulsive experience. This novel fuses the psychological depth of a nineteenth century america romance with the atmosphere of classic american gothic. Its careful weaving of secret identity, family intrigue, and urgent questions of virtue invites both casual readers and seasoned collectors to savour a story that feels intimate, urgent, and hauntingly contemporary. As the…mehr
A gripping meditation on identity and the shadows we carry, Ernest Linwood returns to the shelf as a necessary, modern reimagining of a timeless classic. A tale that binds mystery, motive, and moral reform into a single, compulsive experience. This novel fuses the psychological depth of a nineteenth century america romance with the atmosphere of classic american gothic. Its careful weaving of secret identity, family intrigue, and urgent questions of virtue invites both casual readers and seasoned collectors to savour a story that feels intimate, urgent, and hauntingly contemporary. As the narrator peers into the inner life of the author behind the words, the book reveals how personal truth and public reputation can clash, yet endure. Ernest Linwood holds enduring literary and historical significance: a cornerstone of antebellum fiction that resonates with echoes of edgar allan poe gothic sensibilities and the broader antebellum america milieu. This complete edition by Alpha Editions preserves the work's integrity while inviting new generations to rediscover its ethical questions, narrative ingenuity, and atmospheric craft. Selling points: out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions; restored for today's and future generations; more than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. A perfect addition for lovers of gothic novels, psychological fiction, and collectible nineteenth century literature alike.
Caroline Lee Whiting Hentz was an American novelist and author most known for her defense of slavery and hostility to the abolitionist movement. Her well acclaimed The Planter's Northern Bride (1854) was one of the genre's anti-Tom novels, which were written in response to Harriet Beecher Stowe's popular anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852). Caroline Hentz was born Caroline Lee Whiting to Colonel John and Orpah Whiting on June 1, 1800, in Lancaster, Massachusetts. The youngest among eight children, Her father was a Continental Army soldier in the American Revolutionary War, while three of her brothers participated in the War of 1812.Whiting attended Jared Sparks' private school when she was a child. Caroline and Nicholas Marcellus Hentz were married on September 30, 1824. Shortly after, the pair relocated to Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with their first child, where her husband was appointed chair of modern languages at the University of North Carolina. She is referred to as "a northerner who traveled and worked throughout the South for nearly thirty years." She lived in seven different places during her life, had five children, and supported her family financially through her writing.
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