Imagen del autor

Mary Webb (1) (1881–1927)

Autor de Precious Bane

Para otros autores llamados Mary Webb, ver la página de desambiguación.

Mary Webb (1) se ha aliado con Mary Gladys Meredith Webb.

9+ Obras 1,486 Miembros 45 Reseñas 10 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Mary Webb, c.1910-20

Obras de Mary Webb

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Mary Gladys Meredith Webb.

Obras relacionadas

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Mary Gladys Meredith Webb.

Weird Woods: Tales from the Haunted Forests of Britain (2020) — Contribuidor — 92 copias
The Haunted Library: Classic Ghost Stories (2016) — Contribuidor — 42 copias
The Ghost Book: Sixteen Stories of the Uncanny (1926) — Contribuidor — 35 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Meredith, Mary Gladys (birth name)
Fecha de nacimiento
1881-03-25
Fecha de fallecimiento
1927-10-08
Lugar de sepultura
Shrewsbury Cemetery, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, UK
Género
female
Nacionalidad
England
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
Leighton, Cheshire, England, UK
Lugar de fallecimiento
St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, England, UK
Lugares de residencia
Leighton, Cheshire, England, UK
Much Wenlock, Shropshire, England, UK
Stanton-on-Hine Heath, Shropshire, England, UK
Meole Brace, England, UK
Weston-super-Mare, England, UK
Pontesbury, Shropshire, England, UK (mostrar todos 9)
Bayston Hill, Shropshire, England, UK
London, England, UK
St. Leonard's-on-Sea, Sussex, England, UK
Educación
governess
finishing school
Ocupaciones
novelist
poet
essayist
nature writer
book reviewer
short story writer
Biografía breve
Mary Webb was born Mary Gladys Meredith in Shropshire, England, the eldest of six children in a family proud of their Celtic descent. Her father wrote poetry and painted and shared his deep knowledge of the countryside, history, and folklore of Shropshire with his daughter. She began to write at an early age, including poems, stories, and plays to amuse her younger siblings. She was educated at home by a governess, at her father's boarding school, and then at a finishing school. At age 20, she became ill with Graves disease, a hyperactive thyroid disorder, which caused her many problems and contributed to her early death. It also altered her appearance, which made her self-conscious and largely solitary. During her convalescence from this first attack of illness, she wrote her first nature essays, The Spring of Joy (not published until 1917). In 1912, she married Henry Webb, a teacher and neighbor. They moved to Weston-super-Mare, where Henry Webb got a teaching job. Away from her beloved Shropshire, Mary Webb began writing her first novel, The Golden Arrow (1916). Her second novel, Gone to Earth (1917), was highly acclaimed. At this time, British and USA publishers demonstrated interested in her work and she received advances for her next book The House in Dormer Forest (1920). It was written in a small house that Mary and her husband built in a field near Bayston Hill in central Shropshire, Spring Cottage. In 1921, Henry Webb took a teaching post in London and the couple moved to the city, keeping Spring Cottage as a second home for school holidays and weekends. Mary became active in London literary and journalism circles, and wrote essays, short stories, and poems as well as book reviews for The Spectator, the Nation, and the Bookman. Precious Bane (1924), her fifth novel and most famous work, won the prestigious Prix Femina. However, Mary Webb only achieved wide public recognition and became a bestselling author after her untimely death at age 46.

Miembros

Reseñas

Great story set in rural England of Shropshire somewhat like Wuthering Heights with brooding farmers and a kind woman afflicted with a deformity who is seeking love. Nature seems to reflect the feelings of characters. Really good.
 
Denunciada
kslade | 30 reseñas más. | Dec 8, 2022 |
In beautiful, simple and straightforward language, this book tells the story of characters in a small town in Western England, in the first part of the 19th century. Ignorance runs rampant, with its companion, cruelty, in the small-knit farming community. In the Sarn family, love of money creates dishonesty and ruins lives. But, just when all seems lost and at an end for the brave, good-hearted protagonist, good prevails. Heart-warming.
 
Denunciada
burritapal | 30 reseñas más. | Oct 23, 2022 |
Better than I expected. I do love a good anti-capital book.
 
Denunciada
galuf84 | 30 reseñas más. | Jul 27, 2022 |
Mary Webb and Precious Bane came at me utterly by surprise. I had never heard of her or of the book until a friend of mine spoke very often, in the week or so that we were going through her books, of her strong and early love for Mary Webb, and particularly for the protagonist in PB, Prue Sarn. Eventually I decided to take the book and see for myself.

Although published in 1924, the book has an older feel to me. Webb lived in Shropshire and writes of the poor farmers who lived there. She writes in a beautiful dialect, easy to read and yet filled with words that were new to me but whose meaning were clear from the context. I don’t know exactly when this is set but there are no motorcars, no planes, and life is lived according to season and weather and custom.

Prue is born with a harelip. The folk belief is that a hare looked at her mother when she was carrying Prue in her womb, and because of that she has her slight deformity. She is said to be a witch because of it, tho' it is mostly the unkind gossip of a few rather than the grim belief of the many. But even those who love her know that she will never marry because of her harelip. And though she wishes for her own wifely life, she has no great hopes. Not even when she meets the new Weaver.

Prue's father dies early in the story and the farm falls to her brother Gideon. He sets his eye on a grand house in town and the desire to gain that house and go to the Hunt ball with his wife and in every way command the respect of the people around him. So he works himself and his sister, Prue, nearly to death to achieve that aim. But she has agreed to the dream and to the work and although she disapproves or worries at times about her brother, she is fond of him and works as hard as he.

I’ll say no more of the plot, and here I give you very little — just the beginning. I’ll turn back, instead, to the writing.

As she moves through the days of her life Prue gives great attention to the natural world around her, and her pleasure in it is a deep pleasure to this reader. It is as if I have spent weeks in her world, that I know the countryside almost as well as she does, that I have felt the sun and the rain and seen the mist and shared her joy in everything. I have even gotten to look over her shoulder as she writes in her journal in the attic.

The unhurried unfolding of what is in the main a rich and joyful tale, despite whatever tragedy comes along, is a rare and wonderful gift. This hurried world we live in, where the pace of writing is meant to be breakneck much of the time and tense the rest, seldom permits such a gentle character to truly have her voice. But Webb does so with Prue. She is the unforward, uncritical narrator who observes so well and forgives so much, who allows herself her own quiet world and ways, and who never suspects that she is the protagonist of her own tale.
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
thesmellofbooks | 30 reseñas más. | May 17, 2022 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
9
También por
5
Miembros
1,486
Popularidad
#17,279
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
45
ISBNs
153
Idiomas
7
Favorito
10

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