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Monte-Cristo's daughter: Sequel to Alexander Dumas' great novel, The Count of Monte-Cristo and conclusion of Edmond Dant s explores the emotional inheritance of a young woman raised in a world shaped by justice, secrecy, and paternal legacy. Set against the cultured backdrop of Rome, the novel considers how the shadows of past triumphs and sacrifices inform present choices. Within this environment of constraint and expectation, it emphasizes the conflict between personal longing and familial duty. Education is portrayed not simply as refinement but as containment, and the urge to challenge…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Monte-Cristo's daughter: Sequel to Alexander Dumas' great novel, The Count of Monte-Cristo and conclusion of Edmond Dant s explores the emotional inheritance of a young woman raised in a world shaped by justice, secrecy, and paternal legacy. Set against the cultured backdrop of Rome, the novel considers how the shadows of past triumphs and sacrifices inform present choices. Within this environment of constraint and expectation, it emphasizes the conflict between personal longing and familial duty. Education is portrayed not simply as refinement but as containment, and the urge to challenge these boundaries reveals a powerful undercurrent of desire and rebellion. As encounters with prestige, performance, and romantic fascination unfold, the narrative draws attention to the pressures of reputation and the allure of forbidden attachments. Through reflections on identity, social decorum, and emotional restraint, the story illuminates the struggle to define selfhood within the limits of name and blood. This continuation transforms inherited myth into intimate conflict, showing how even a celebrated lineage must wrestle with human vulnerability.
Autorenporträt
Edmund Flagg was an American writer, lawyer, and diplomat born around 1815 and died in 1890. His parents' names are not recorded in known public archives. Flagg's multifaceted career combined public service and literary ambition. As a diplomat, he contributed to early American foreign relations, and as a writer, he produced works spanning historical romance, travel narrative, and political commentary. His literary output includes both fiction and nonfiction, often centered on European history and settings. Among his notable publications are The Far West, which offered impressions of frontier America, and Venice: The City of the Sea, a detailed chronicle of political upheaval in Italy. He also wrote several historical novels such as Francis of Valois and The Howard Queen. Later in his career, Flagg ventured into literary continuation, authoring Edmond Dant s and Monte-Cristo's Daughter, sequels to Alexandre Dumas' famous novel The Count of Monte Cristo. These works attempted to extend Dumas' legacy through imaginative reinterpretation. Flagg's career reflected an ongoing interest in history, justice, and international affairs, shaped by a 19th-century American perspective.