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The queen's twin and other stories explores the intricate lives of coastal Maine residents, illuminating a world where history, memory, and identity shape everyday experience. In the opening story, a woman who shares a birthday with a monarch becomes the symbolic centerpiece around which larger questions of meaning orbit. Her life in a remote community is colored by this perceived kinship, allowing her to connect her humble surroundings with the grander narratives of empire and legacy. Through another resident s recounting of their visit to her, the tale captures a rich portrait of rural…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The queen's twin and other stories explores the intricate lives of coastal Maine residents, illuminating a world where history, memory, and identity shape everyday experience. In the opening story, a woman who shares a birthday with a monarch becomes the symbolic centerpiece around which larger questions of meaning orbit. Her life in a remote community is colored by this perceived kinship, allowing her to connect her humble surroundings with the grander narratives of empire and legacy. Through another resident s recounting of their visit to her, the tale captures a rich portrait of rural social life, anchored in shared stories and personal lore. The tension between the familiar rhythms of village life and the emotional pull of imagined ties to distant royalty creates a quiet poignancy. The coastal setting is depicted with deep reverence, serving as a backdrop where sea, land, and memory converge. Through conversations and observations, the collection reflects on aging, friendship, national identity, and the ways in which ordinary people locate themselves in the flow of history, imbuing simple lives with quiet nobility and gentle humor.
Autorenporträt
Theodora Sarah Orne Jewett was an American author best known for her fiction centered on life in small-town New England, particularly the coastal communities of Maine. Born on September 3, 1849, in South Berwick, Maine, she was the daughter of Theodore Herman Jewett, a physician, and Caroline Frances Perry. Her upbringing in a well-read household fostered a lifelong interest in literature, which she pursued alongside a deep appreciation for the natural world and the everyday experiences of those in her local surroundings. Educated at Berwick Academy, she was encouraged from a young age to read widely and write with precision and depth. She gained recognition for her short stories published in prominent magazines and solidified her reputation with works like The Country of the Pointed Firs. Jewett never married and lived most of her life in her hometown, drawing on her environment for inspiration. Her quiet yet richly detailed narratives earned her a lasting place in American literature before her death in South Berwick on June 24, 1909, at the age of 59.