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1 Local Warehouse Great Britain- Hanover to Victorian Period

Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson

by Paula Byrne

Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

This thoroughly engaging and richly researched book presents a compelling portrait of Mary Robinson–darling of the London stage, mistress to the most powerful men in England, feminist thinker, and bestselling author, described by Samuel Taylor Coleridge as “a woman of undoubted genius.”

One of the most flamboyant free spirits of the late eighteenth century, Mary Robinson led a life that was marked by reversals of fortune. After being abandoned by her merchant father, who left England to establish a fishery among the Canadian Eskimos, Mary was married, at age fifteen, to Thomas Robinson. His dissipation landed the couple and their baby in debtors’ prison, where Mary wrote her first book of poetry, gaining her the patronage of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire.

On her release, Mary rose to become one of the London theater’s most alluring actresses, famously playing Perdita in The Winter’s Tale for a rapt audience that included the Prince of Wales, who fell madly in love with her. Never one to pass up an opportunity, she later used his ardent and numerous love letters as blackmail. After being struck down by paralysis, apparently following a miscarriage, she remade herself yet again, this time as a popular writer who was also admired by the leading intellectuals of the day.

Filled with triumph and despair, and then triumph again, the amazing, multifaceted life of “Perdita” is marvelously captured in this stunning biography.

Review:

“Like her sometime patron, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, brilliant Mary Robinson flared like a comet through late eighteenth-century England’s elite society. Literary sleuth Paula Byrne has ransacked archives across the world to piece together the most complete account to date of this fascinating woman. Perdita is an absorbing study in chiaroscuro of a woman too beautiful and too complex for even Reynolds and Gainsborough to capture on canvas.”

Gillian Gill, author of Nightingales: The Extraordinary Upbringing and Curious Life of Miss Florence Nightingale

Review:

“A remarkable woman and an exceptional biography.”

Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana: Duchess of Devonshire

Review:

“A fascinating, page-turning, and probably definitive biography of this intriguing woman.”

Emma Donoghue, author of Life Mask and Slammerkin

Review:

“We seem to have an insatiable appetite for biographies of eighteenth century women. . . . A superbly researched and narrated life of a woman whose capacity for self-transformation, when combined with beauty, talent, wit, and passion suggest that she may be the most interesting of them all . . . a fine biographer has conjured up a dazzling personality and brought her, laughing, back to life.”

Miranda Seymour, Sunday Times (London)

Review:

“A work of genuine scholarship . . . a masterly portrait of a remarkable woman.”

Sunday Telegraph (London)

Synopsis:

Poetess, actress, and author--Mary Robinson's life was famously scandalous in London during the late 1700s. Titled after Robinson's most famous stage character, "Perdita" is Byrne's first book published in the United States.

About the Author

PAULA BYRNE has a Ph.D. from the University of Liverpool, where she is a research fellow in English literature. A regular contributor to The Times Literary Supplement, she lives in Warwickshire with her two young children and her husband, the critic and biographer Jonathan Bate. Perdita is her first book to be published in the U.S.

Product Details

ISBN:
9781400061488
Author:
Byrne, Paula
Publisher:
Random House
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
Historical - British
Subject:
Historical - General
Subject:
Actors
Subject:
Authors, English
Subject:
Entertainment & Performing Arts - Theatre
Copyright:
Publication Date:
March 2005
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Y
Pages:
445
Dimensions:
9.74x6.52x1.54 in. 1.71 lbs.

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