The Mentor: American Novelists, Vol. 1, No. 25

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HENRY JAMES

W. D. HOWELLS

THOMAS NELSON PAGE

JAMES LANE ALLEN

WINSTON CHURCHILL

OWEN WISTER

SUPPLEMENTARY READING

Transcriber's Notes:

“A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend”


Vol. 1 No. 25

AMERICAN NOVELISTS


HENRY JAMES

WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS

THOMAS NELSON PAGE
man
JAMES LANE ALLEN

WINSTON CHURCHILL

OWEN WISTER

By HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE

This group of distinguished novelists may be divided into four smaller groups, not only in time, but in selection and treatment of subjects. Mr. James and Mr. Howells are now the senior members of the literary fraternity in this country, and have not only American but European reputations. Only three novelists before them attained this distinction. The earliest of these, Cooper, is still read in many parts of the world, and in little German villages boys call themselves “Cooper Indians,” and play at oldtime savage warfare. The author of the “Leatherstocking Tales” wrote the first original American novel, and Hawthorne wrote the first American romance. The first described the manners and customs of a people whom he knew at first hand, but whom Europe knew only by hearsay; the second analyzed the motives and described the workings of the Puritan spirit, and showed how the consciousness of sin worked itself out in the Puritan character. The theme was new, and the manner of treating it was both effective and beautiful—and Hawthorne remains the most artistic writer this country has produced.

Harriet Beacher Stowe

HARRIET BEECHER STOWE

The next novelist to whom Europe paid attention was Mrs. Stowe. “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” was like a great torch held up over a fiercely disputed field; it showed men and women living under all conditions of slavery, paternal and humane on one hand, and commercial and cruel on the other. It made a drama of a political issue, and was read with bated breath by a million people. It interested Europe because it was a powerful story dealing with a situation that had attracted the attention of the whole Western world; it was at once translated into several languages, and could be found from London to Constantinople.

Home of Harriet Beacher Stowe

HOME OF HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. HARTFORD, CONN.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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