Review
Much of the strength of Mary Wilkins Freeman's work comes from its deep grounding in nineteenth-century New England culture. With a cool eye, she saw the eccentricities, pride, and religious self-righteousness of those who lived around her and used it in her work, sometimes lovingly, sometimes with scorn.
Pembroke combines both these attitudes in its depiction of several young and older couples. Barnabas and Charlotte are engaged to be married; one night Barney enters into a heated political discussion with Charlotte's father and is ordered from the house. He swears he will never return, even if that means giving up Charlotte. Barney's sister, Rebecca, falls in love with William Berry, but her mother forbids the relationship. So Rebecca sneaks out to see him, with disastrous results. Sylvia Crane has kept company with Richard Alger every Sunday night for twenty years, but he has just never managed to ask her to marry him. Time and again these couples come close to happiness; time and again one or both of them shove it away. It might be easy to dismiss these people, but Mary Wilkins Freeman makes sure we understand that they are just that - people - who deserve love, even as they hold off the world at arm's length. Through their lives she lets us see what it is like to be cold, inside and out, when there is warmth to be had.
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From 500 Great Books by Women; review by Erica Bauermeister
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
About the Author
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (1852-1930) was born in Randolph, Massachusetts, and died in Metuchen, New Jersey. Among her published regional short fiction and novels are A Humble Romance and Other Stories, A New England Nun and Other Stories, Jane Field, and The Portion of Labor. In 1926 she received the William Dean Howells Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters for distinction in fiction. That same year, she and Edith Wharton were among the first women to be elected to membership in the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Charles Johanningsmeier is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Nebraska, Omaha. He is the author of Fiction and the American Literary Marketplace: The Role of Newspaper Syndicates in America, 1860-1900.
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