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Ebook Details
  • 08/2015
  • 9780996243124 B013U61T5A
  • 638 pages
  • $9.99
Paperback Details
  • 08/2015
  • 978-0996243117
  • 638 pages
  • $29.95
Stefan Cooke
Editor (anthology)
Barbara Newhall Follett: A Life in Letters
Stefan Cooke, editor (anthology)
By the age of 14, Barbara Newhall Follett had published two books with Alfred A. Knopf: 1927's enchanting "The House Without Windows and Eepersip's Life There" and 1928's "The Voyage of the Norman D."—Barbara's account of her journey from New Haven to Nova Scotia as "cabin boy" on a lumber schooner. Both books received rave reviews in the New York Times, the Saturday Review, and elsewhere. But that same year Barbara's life turned upside down when her father left his family for a younger woman. With no income, Barbara and her mother went to sea with their typewriters, hoping to earn a living by writing about their adventures. They spent several months in the West Indies, then sailed through the Panama Canal to the South Seas, where they spent several more months before eventually returning to East Coast. After living in New York City for two years, Barbara's wanderlust returned when she and her future husband embarked on a 600-mile walk in the mountains of New England along the nascent Appalachian Trail. After spending another year exploring Spain and Germany, the couple settled in Boston. But in 1939 the marriage soured, and on December 7th of that year 25-year-old Barbara walked out of the apartment, never to be seen or heard from again. This book, compiled and edited by Barbara's half-nephew, tells the story of Barbara's extraordinary life through her own words.
Reviews
The writer Barbara Follett, as revealed in this compilation of letters, diary entries, and reviews edited by her half-nephew Cooke, lived a life that would be unbelievable if it were presented in a work of fiction. Born in 1914, Barbara began writing at age four and published her first novel, The House Without Windows, at 13. She was home-schooled and had little contact with other children; most of her early letters are to grown-up friends. She was enthralled by nature and invented her own world, Farksolia. This idyllic life was shattered when Barbara’s adored father left the family for another woman. His letters at this time are bitterly cruel. In an effort to establish Barbara as a travel writer, her mother, Helen, took her on a long odyssey to the South Pacific. Cooke’s narrative emphasizes that Barbara shared her father’s tendency to escape problems rather than confronting them. In Samoa, Barbara suffered “a smash—emotional and nervous.” Back in the U.S., she ran away and was found by the police, a widely reported incident. In 1939, shortly after her husband of five years asked for a divorce, she left her house and was never seen again. Many of the letters repeatedly cover the same ground, but anyone intrigued by this real-life mystery will want to read them all. Her fantastical life and the enigma of her disappearance are equally compelling. (BookLife)
Laura E. Smith

This is such a beautiful collection--not to mention a fascinating story. Barbara's life is equal parts inspiring and haunting. I am particularly fond of the letters to her fellow shipmates (the girl had guts!) and "ADR." Barbara had such a striking voice and is a modern figure in so many ways. She traveled all over the world by sea, traversed part of the Appalachian Trail, and published a novel at twelve. Stefan Cooke, the collection's editor, has such a gentle touch, offering introductions and explanations to Barbara's letters when necessary. I would recommend this to anyone who loves the outdoors or an intriguing, occasionally confounding story about a young girl searching for the best way to live.

R. Carter

Cheers to Mr Cooke for putting together this collection of letters from this important and fascinating author. Barbara’s letters not only reveal her character and genius, they also bring the reader incredibly close to her side, as if we were a frequent visitor to the household. I have an inkling now what it must have been like to talk with her, perhaps even to be among those very lucky adults with whom she maintained a regular correspondence. These letters make clear that by the age of ten Barbara had developed of mastery of expression that places her among the best of writers of any era. Such vivid, discerning, joyful, and honest descriptions of the natural world as Barbara provided with apparent ease deserve to be known to the world and lauded as examplars of what our English language can accomplish when wielded by a truly gifted author. A memorable and moving read.

Tim

Amazing book! Reading the letters from Barbara, especially the early ones, you really get a sense just what a genius she really was, which makes what happened all the more a tragedy. I hope this book, along with all the recent interest in Barbara's life help keep her work alive long after she left us. Stefen Cooke did a great job of letting Barbara come to us through her words, without editorializing or injecting his own armchair psychoanalysis. He just gives us well researched and nuanced context that helps us understand.

One can't help wondering what Barbara might have given the world in other circumstances.

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 08/2015
  • 9780996243124 B013U61T5A
  • 638 pages
  • $9.99
Paperback Details
  • 08/2015
  • 978-0996243117
  • 638 pages
  • $29.95
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