000745089 000__ 04779cam\a2200397\i\4500 000745089 001__ 745089 000745089 005__ 20210515112559.0 000745089 008__ 140703s2015\\\\nyua\\\\\b\\\\001\0ceng\\ 000745089 010__ $$a 2014014841 000745089 019__ $$a879915338$$a935949457 000745089 020__ $$a9781400068425$$qhardcover 000745089 020__ $$a1400068428$$qhardcover 000745089 020__ $$z9780812996517$$qelectronic book 000745089 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocn882738700 000745089 040__ $$aDLC$$beng$$erda$$cDLC$$dIG#$$dYDXCP$$dBTCTA$$dBDX$$dTOH$$dOCLCF$$dIAD$$dUPZ$$dSINLB$$dJAI$$dIH9$$dVP@$$dABG$$dYT2$$dGZM$$dOVY$$dVLR$$dZCU$$dOCLCQ$$dOCLCO$$dOCLCA$$dOCLCQ$$dOCLCO$$dCUS 000745089 042__ $$apcc 000745089 043__ $$ae-uk---$$ae-uk-en 000745089 049__ $$aISEA 000745089 05000 $$aPR5841.W8$$bZ716 2015 000745089 08200 $$a828/.609$$aB$$223 000745089 1001_ $$aGordon, Charlotte. 000745089 24510 $$aRomantic outlaws :$$bthe extraordinary lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and her daughter Mary Shelley /$$cCharlotte Gordon. 000745089 250__ $$aFirst U.S. edition. 000745089 264_1 $$aNew York :$$bRandom House,$$c[2015] 000745089 300__ $$axviii, 649 pages :$$billustrations ;$$c25 cm 000745089 336__ $$atext$$btxt$$2rdacontent 000745089 337__ $$aunmediated$$bn$$2rdamedia 000745089 338__ $$avolume$$bnc$$2rdacarrier 000745089 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 609-623) and index. 000745089 5050_ $$aDeath and a birth (1797-1801) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : the early years (1759-1774) -- Mary Godwin : childhood and a new family (1801-1812) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : Hoxton and Bath (1774-1782) -- Mary Godwin : Scotland, an "eyry of freedom" (1810-1814) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : independence (1783-1785) -- Mary Godwin : "the sublime and rapturous moment" (1814) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : on the education of daughters (1785-1787) -- Mary Godwin : the break (1814) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : London (1786-1787) -- Mary Godwin : London and Bishopsgate (1814-1815) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : the first vindication (1787-1791) -- Mary Godwin : "mad, bad and dangerous to know" (1816) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "a revolution in female manners" (1791-1792) -- Mary Godwin : fits of fantasy (1816) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : Paris (1792-1793) -- Mary Shelley : retribution (1816-1817) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : in love (1792) -- Mary Shelley : Marlow and London (1817-1818) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "motherhood" (1793-1794) -- Mary Shelley : Italy, "the happy hours" (1818-1819) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : abandoned (1794-1795) -- Mary Shelley : "our little Will" (1818-1819) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "surely you will not forget me" (1795) -- Mary Shelley : "the mind of a woman" (1819) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : return home (1795-1796) -- Mary Shelley : "when winter comes" (1819-1820) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "a humane and tender consideration" (1796) -- Mary Shelley : Pisa (1820-1821) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : in love again (1796) -- Mary Shelley : "league of incest" (1821-1822) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "I still mean to be independent" (1797) -- Mary Shelley : "it's all over" (1822) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : "a little patience" (1797) -- Mary Shelley : "the deepest solitude" (1823-1828) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : the memoir (1797-1801) -- Mary Shelley : a writing life (1832-1836) -- Mary Wollstonecraft : the wrongs (1797-1798) -- Mary Shelley : ramblings (1837-1848) -- Mary and Mary : heroic exertions. 000745089 520__ $$a"Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) and her daughter Mary Shelley (1797-1851) have each been the subject of numerous biographies by top tier writers, yet no author has ever examined their lives in tandem. Perhaps this is because these two amazing women never knew each other--Wollstonecraft died of infection at the age of 38, a week after giving birth to her daughter. Nevertheless their lives were closely intertwined, their choices, dreams and tragedies so eerily similar, it seems impossible to consider one without the other: both became famous writers; both fell in love with brilliant but impossible authors; both were single mothers and had children out of wedlock (a shocking and self-destructive act in their day); both broke out of the rigid conventions of their era and lived in exile; and both played important roles in the Romantic era during which they lived. The lives of both Marys were nothing less than extraordinary, providing fabulous material for Charlotte Gordon, a gifted story teller. She seamlessly weaves their lives together in back and forth narratives, taking readers on a vivid journey across Revolutionary France and Victorian England, from the Italian seaports to the highlands of Scotland, in a book that reads like a richly textured historical novel"--$$cProvided by publisher. 000745089 586__ $$aNational Book Critics Circle Award for Biography, 2015. 000745089 60010 $$aWollstonecraft, Mary,$$d1759-1797. 000745089 60010 $$aShelley, Mary Wollstonecraft,$$d1797-1851. 000745089 655_7 $$aBiographies.$$2lcgft 000745089 85200 $$bgen$$hPR5841.W8$$iZ716$$i2015 000745089 85642 $$3Cover image$$u9781400068425.jpg 000745089 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:745089$$pGLOBAL_SET 000745089 980__ $$aBIB 000745089 980__ $$aBOOK