Item #3091 How He Won Her. E. D. E. N. Southworth, Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte.

How He Won Her

Chicago: M. A. Donohue & Company, no date. 1st Edition Thus. Hardcover_cloth. 5.25"X7.5". 312 pages 11 pg advertisment for The Flowers' Work. Gray cloth boards. Embossed black letters on front with a design and author's name all in black outline box. Same on spine. Colophon on title page. Published originally in 1869. This publisher operated from 1890-1934. Spine straight, binding tight, slight tone to pages, PON on first fly page, no other markings. Moderate edge wear w/rubs, light stains to covers, fraying to heel and crown of spine. Used - VeryGood / No Jacket. Item #3091

A sequel to Fair Play published in 1867.
Author's Life and career:
E. D. E. N. Southworth was born Emma Nevitte on December 26, 1819, in Washington, D.C., to Susannah Wailes and Charles LeCompte Nevitte, a Virginia merchant. Her father died in 1824, and per his deathbed request she was christened Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte.[4][5] She studied in a school kept by her stepfather, Joshua L. Henshaw. She later recalled her childhood as a lonely one, with her happiest moments spent exploring Maryland's Tidewater region on horseback. During those rides, she acquired an abiding interest in the area's history and folklore.[6] After attending her stepfather's school, she completed her secondary education in 1835 at the age of 15. She then accepted a position as a schoolteacher.[6] In 1840 she married inventor Frederick H. Southworth,[7] of Utica, New York.[8] Southworth moved with her husband to Wisconsin to become a teacher. After 1843, she returned to Washington, D.C. without her husband and with two young children.[9]
After the birth of their second child, Frederick abandoned his family in search of Brazilian gold. Southworth never divorced her husband on conscientious grounds.[6][10]
She began to write stories to support herself and her children when her husband deserted her in 1844. Her first story, "The Irish Refugee", was published in the Baltimore Saturday Visiter.[8] Some of her earliest works appeared in The National Era, the newspaper that printed Uncle Tom's Cabin. The bulk of her work appeared as a serial in Robert E. Bonner's New York Ledger, and in 1857 Southworth signed a contract to write exclusively for this publication.[11]
The exclusive contract Southworth signed with Bonner in 1856 and royalties from her published novels earned her about $10,000 a year, making her one of the country's best-paid writers.[12] Southworth and her children were in ill health through much of the 1850s, but Bonner's contract guaranteed her income regardless of any periods of inactivity brought on by poor health. This arrangement remained intact for 30 years.[6]
Like her friend Harriet Beecher Stowe, she was a supporter of social change and women's rights, but she was not nearly as active on these issues. Her first novel, Retribution, a serial for the National Era, published in book form in 1846, was so well received that she gave up teaching and became a regular contributor to various periodicals, especially the New York Ledger. She lived in Georgetown, D.C., until 1876, then in Yonkers, New York, and again in Georgetown, where she died on June 8, 1899.[8][13]
Her best known work was The Hidden Hand. It first appeared in serial form in the New York Ledger in 1859, and was serialized twice more (1868–69, 1883) before first appearing in book form in 1888. Bonner used the appeal of the novel to "give an occasional boost to his weekly's already massive circulation."[14] It features Capitola Black, a tomboyish protagonist that finds herself in a myriad of adventures. Southworth stated that nearly every adventure of her heroine came from real life. Most of Southworth's novels deal with the Southern United States during the post-American Civil War era. She wrote over sixty; some of them were translated into German, French, Chinese, Icelandic and Spanish; in 1872 an edition of thirty-five volumes was published in Philadelphia.[15]
Bonner was asked by a reporter in 1889 "Who were your most successful story writers?" His reply was: "Mrs. Southworth and Sylvanus Cobb Jr. I think that the most popular and successful stories ever printed as serials were Cobb’s 'The Gunmaker of Moscow' and Mrs. Southworth’s 'Hidden Hand.' "[10]
Her novel Tried for Her Life was referenced in chapter 8 of Jack Finney's novel Time and Again.
Southworth is buried in Washington's Oak Hill Cemetery.[16].

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