Fanny: A Fiction

Author: Edmund White

Stock information

General Fields

  • : 27.99 NZD
  • : 9780099285724
  • : Penguin Random House
  • : Vintage
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  • : 0.37
  • : October 2004
  • : 198mm X 129mm X 26mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 27.99
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  • :
  • : books

Special Fields

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  • :
  • : Edmund White
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  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • :
  • :
  • : 813.54
  • : good
  • :
  • : 336
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Barcode 9780099285724
9780099285724

Description

This is a marvellously spirited, hilarious and touching historical novel - a spoof biography, written by the aging Fanny Trollope, of her friend the Scottish radical and feminist Fanny Wright (born in Dundee and brought up partly in Glasgow). From the start, our narrator is enthralled, but also baffled, by her dashing heroine, who burst into her life as a young woman, red hair flying, spouting utopian ideals. The infatuated Mrs Trollope follows her idol first to France in the 1820s, where Fanny Wright has an affair with Lafayette, then to America, where Fanny meets Jefferson (another implied affair), and becomes dedicated to the abolition of slavery. When Fanny sets up an utopian commune in Mississippi, poor Mrs Trollope and her son and a French artist go out to join her: but instead of a paradise they find a version of hell. More adventures follow, taking both women across land and sea to fulfil their contrasting destinies. This is a story packed with comic incident, strange characters and vivid setting, from Scottish tenements, English drawing-rooms and Parisian salons, to the mud of the Mississippi and the colour and noise of Haiti. As Fanny Trollope sits in her Florentine villa gazing back across the troubled landscapes of their lives, she digresses hopelessly about her own family, none of whom she understands. Yet we realise that in her radical friend's slipstream she has found her own voice, and her own startlingly sensual form of love. In the end we wonder, which Fanny is the real heroine? Beneath the warm humour and touching revelations of character run currents of seriousness - the nature of idealism, the clay feet of heroes, the illusory power of the American dream. In this powerful and vibrant novel, love and politics, sex and power, race and place are intertwined.

Promotion info

A quirky, dazzling fiction about the lives, loves and battles of two extraordinary nineteenth-century women. 20031017

Author description

Edmund White's novels include A Boy's Own Story, Farewell Symphony and A Married Man. A well-known critic, he is also the author of an acclaimed biography of Jean Genet. After living in Paris for many years, he is now settled in New York, and teaches at Princeton University.