ISBN: PB: 9781847772374

Carcanet

March 2013

266 pp.

21,3x13,5 cm

PB:
12.95 GBP
QTY:

Categories:

Mary Shelley

In the summer of 1816, aged nineteen, Mary Shelley wrote "Frankenstein". A pioneering work of science fiction, it captured the popular imagination from the start. The daughter of radical philosopher William Godwin and pioneering feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley lived an unconventional life marred by tragedy. At sixteen she scandalised England by eloping with her married lover, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, but was widowed after only a few years when he drowned. She survived him by nearly thirty years, supporting herself and their one surviving son largely by the pen.

Muriel Spark had a lifelong fascination with Mary Shelley. She published her first book on her in 1951, then spent decades revising and refining it. It is reissued here with previously unpublished material. Spark paints an engaging portrait of a complex and misunderstood figure. She divides her study into parts, "Biographical" and "Critical". A sympathetic account of Shelley's life is followed by critical studies of her major literary works. Spark's abridgement of Shelley's uneven apocalyptic novel "The Last Man" is included here, while her initial scheme for the book and her later preface, in which she reflects on her own subsequent career as a novelist, are added. This is a fascinating study of Mary Shelley's life and work. It also provides valuable insight into the critical and creative development of Muriel Spark.

About the author

Muriel Spark was born in Edinburgh in 1918. After some years living in Africa, she returned to England, where she edited Poetry Review from 1947 to 1949 and published her first volume of poems, "The Fanfarlo", in 1952. She eventually made her home in Italy. Her many novels include "Memento Mori" (1959), "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" (1961), "The Girls of Slender Means" (1963), "The Abbess of Crewe" (1974), "A Far Cry from Kensington" (1988) and "The Finishing School" (2004). Her short stories were collected in 1967, 1985 and 2001, and her "Collected Poems" appeared in 1967. Dame Muriel was made Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres (France) in 1996 and awarded her DBE in 1993. She died in Italy on 13th April 2006, at the age of 88.

Reviews

"Sometimes you meet an author who takes you by the hand, and engages some hitherto untapped corner of the mind. Mary Shelley was such for Muriel Spark, and Spark must have been for countless others. I would count myself one. [...] Mary Shelley shows her on the cusp, discovering not only the style that would make her famous but the "integrity of [her] nature" (as Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote to Mary)" – Zoe Strachan, Scottish Review of Books

"Muriel Spark's biography of Mary Shelley keeps its focus on the woman herself and refuses to be distracted by the celebrities in her life" – Victoria Segal, Guardian

"Spark shows herself to be as fearless and original a biographer as she was a novelist" – Kathryn Hughes, Times Literary Supplement

"Her imagination allows her so convincingly to inhabit Mary Shelley's time, place and temperament" – Jeanette Winterson, The Sunday Times