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Maggie: A Girl of the Streets - Stephen Crane, Thomas A. Gullason
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets
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2.00 5
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets was the first major naturalistic novel in America.This edition reprints the first published version, that of 1893. Misprints and errors have been corrected and are identified in "A Note on the Text."  Footnotes indicate changes in wording Crane made for the 1896... show more
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets was the first major naturalistic novel in America.This edition reprints the first published version, that of 1893. Misprints and errors have been corrected and are identified in "A Note on the Text."  Footnotes indicate changes in wording Crane made for the 1896 edition and explain slang expressions and customs of the day.  Maps of the novel’s New York City locales are also provided. "Backgrounds and Sources" includes nonfictional accounts of urban life by Jacob Riis and others from which Crane drew, as well as discussions of Crane’s literary sources "The Author and the Novel" traces the history of the novel's composition and revision. Contemporary American reviews of the 1893 Maggie and American and English reviews of the 1896 edition focus on the historical importance of the work, the values and tastes of the 1890s, and Crane’s modernism. The modern critical essays are by John Berryman, Charles Child Walcutt, William Bysshe Stein, Joseph X. Brennan, Janet Overmyer, Donald Pizer, Joseph Katz, Eric Solomon, Jay Martin, Donald B. Gibson, Arno Karlen, Katherine G. Simoneaux, Frank Bergon, Hershel Parker, Brian Higgins, and Thomas A. Gullason.
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Format: paperback
ISBN: 9780393950243 (0393950247)
ASIN: 393950247
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Pages no: 258
Edition language: English
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Community Reviews
Flying Kick-a-pow!
Flying Kick-a-pow! rated it
2.0
I guess I'll eventually bother to review this, but it will probably be a rather dull review. So. Yeah.
lonesomepoint
lonesomepoint rated it
I thought I'd never read a book sadder than The Chocolate War, but I was wrong. Maggie: A Girl of The Streets is desolate. What I found most disturbing about it is that Maggie largely doesn't have parents, and certainly not loving parents. Both parents are alcoholics, and the father dies early. The ...
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