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By the author ofThe Secret Garden, the 1886 story of a curly-haired American boy who suddenly discovers he is the grandson of an English earl.Frances Hodgson Burnett (1849-1924) was born and grew up in Manchester, but her father died when she was three and in 1865 she emigrated with her mother to Knoxville, Tennessee, where her uncle had already opened a grocery store. Five years later her mother died and – like many other women of her time – she began writing short stories for popular magazines to support her family. Her first novel,That Lass o' Lowrie's(1877), brought her instant fame on both sides of the Atlantic.In 1873 she had married Swan Burnett, a physician, and it was for the two sons of the marriage that she wroteLittle Lord Fauntleroy, which was first serialized in the children's monthly magazineSt. Nicholas.When published in book form in October 1886, it went immediately on to the bestseller lists alongside Tolstoy's War and Peace and Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines.Mrs. Burnett wrote many other novels, for both children and adults, as well as plays and short stories, but she is best remembered forThe Secret Garden(1911) andA Little Princess(1905).Her marriage to Dr. Burnett ended in divorce in 1898 and two years later she remarried – but, again, the marriage ended, this time in separation. She became an American citizen in 1905, though she travelled frequently to Europe. She died at her home on Long Island a few weeks before her seventy-fifth birthday.DE
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