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Fashion and Famine

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About This Book

A young woman’s passage from market life into wealthier social circles exposes how fashion, vanity, and economic strain produce temptation, falsehood, and a disastrous legal charge. The narrative shifts between bustling urban marketplaces, intimate domestic scenes, fashionable entertainments, and the grim reality of prison and courtroom, revealing family secrets, conflicting loyalties, and the effects of poverty on moral choice. Themes of maternal love, conscience, and charity thread through accounts of suffering and sacrifice, leading to a final reckoning in which guilt, compassion, and social conscience determine the outcome for those implicated.

About the Author

Stephens, Ann S. portrait

Ann S. Stephens

Ann S. Stephens was a prominent American novelist and writer in the 19th century, known for her contributions to the genre of domestic fiction. She authored several notable works, including "Malaeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter," which reflects her interest in themes of cultural conflict and identity. Stephens often explored the complexities of women's lives and societal expectations in her narratives, as seen in titles like "A Noble Woman" and "Fashion and Famine." Her writing not only entertained but also provided commentary on the social issues of her time, making her a significant figure in the literary landscape of her era.

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