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Book Review
| Helen Hunt Jackson: A Literary Life. By Kate Phillips. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003. x + 370 pp. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index. $34.95, £24.95.)
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In this new evaluation of Helen Hunt Jackson's life and letters, Kate Phillips demonstrates how meticulous research is essential to any revisionist study. Phillips own gifts as a writer make this work also a flawless read. |
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Revisiting the scholarly territory of the first and only creditable biography on Jackson, Ruth Odell's Helen Hunt Jackson (New York, 1939), Phillips reconsiders the foundational research for that book, but extends the scholarship to include 314 personal Jackson letters, which add emotional, psychological, and factual depth. An exceedingly private person who avoided public speculations on her thoughts and feelings, Jackson instructed friends, relatives, and publishers to burn existing correspondence, manuscripts, and the like before her death. Yet from collections across the country and even from great-grandnephew, William S. Jackson III, who during the research period discovered a new cache of letters in a suitcase in a house in Denver, Phillips has reconstructed an epistolary trail deepening our understanding of Jackson and her varied work in poetry, travel writing, domestic writing, fiction, and Indian Reform work. |
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