Blue cloth boards with title stamped in gilt
1903 · London:
by Cook, Mrs. E.T. [Emily Constance].
London: George Allen, 1903 Blue cloth boards with title stamped in gilt. Octavo. Minor shelf-ware to binding. Top edge gilt. Some foxing to title page, contents, and first few leaves. The stitching of the binding is a little slack but still holds. Front endpaper includes contemporary ink inscription from the author: "To Molly from E.T.C. Dec. 1903. Very good. From a Woman's Note-Book is a book of essays, all of which were written between 1891 and 1903, as clarified in the author's note. Cook also explains that the sketches aren't all autobiographical: "The author put her observations into a personal form, but it need not be inferred that every such characterization is biographical" (v). The book's contents include "A Modern High-School Girl" about an academically accomplished girl who is disinterested during a grand tour. "Shadows" describes a girl who stresses about being a genius, but then is made content by marrying and having children. In following essays, Cook describes "The Modern Novel" and "Literary Ladies," at one point comparing the learning styles of Tilly from Uncle Tom's Cabin and Jane Eyre.
(Inventory #: 17841)