Austin, Mary: Review: Anonymous. "A Woman of Genius" by Mary Austin
Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library

| Table of Contents for this work |
| All on-line databases | Etext Center Homepage |

About the electronic version


"A Woman of Genius" by Mary Austin
Austin, Mary: Review: Anonymous

Creation of machine-readable version: Judy Boss

Creation of digital images: Judy Boss

Conversion to TEI.2-conformant markup: University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center. ca. 10 kilobytes
This version available from the University of Virginia Library.
Charlottesville, Va.

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/modeng/modeng0.browse.html
1996
About the print version


Review of "A Woman of Genius" by Mary Austin
American Monthly Review of Reviews
Anonymous
New York
February 1913

   Some Representative Fiction


Note: Review of Mary Austin's "A Woman of Genius" in the "Some Representative Fiction" column of The American Monthly Review of Reviews, Volume 47, Feb. 1913, page 240-1.

   Prepared for the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center.

   Spell-check and verification made against printed text using WordPerfect spell checker.


Published: 1913


English non-fiction; prose Native AmericanWomen Writers LCSH
Revisions to the electronic version
March 1996 corrector Matthew G. Kirschenbaum, University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center
Added TEI.2-conformant header and tagging.



etextcenter@virginia.edu. Commercial use prohibited; all usage governed by our Conditions of Use: http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/conditions.html



Mary Austin






-240-


   The drama, instead of literature, is the career of the chief figure in Mrs. Mary Austin's "A Woman of Genius" (Doubleday). It may safely be said that had George Moore never written "The Mummer's Wife," this book would have taken a different form. Olivia Lattimore is convinced that she can act. Her theatrical efforts shock her neighbors in Taylorsville, Ohianna, but eventually give her great wealth and international fame. In the pursuit of this fame, she becomes "emancipated" of most conscientious scruples, and lives, the author would have us believe, a very gay life. The book is in part a criticism of the moral narrowness of the citizens of the Middle West, an exposition of Genius breaking the fetters of respectability. But it is interesting to note that the author's conception of an actress's career is deliciously provincial -- she describes Olivia as living a life of wild riot, and yet gaining distinguished success in the most exacting and arduous of professions.



-241-


This naivete gives an innocent charm to the book.