From acclaimed writer Margot Peters comes the first, completely authorized biography of novelist, poet, and feminist May Sarton. Granted unprecedented access to personal papers and diaries, Peters gives us a compelling look at the woman who influenced a legion of readers with rich and intimate writings, and reveals the fascinating life that Sarton herself kept hidden.
Beginning with a young Sarton largely ignored by her parents, Peters traces the compulsive quest for recognition and artistic inspiration that would characterize most of Sarton's life. We witness her at nineteen as she chooses a life in the theater, only to discover later her real passion: writing. As her literary career takes shape, we watch her personal and professional struggles for acceptance, her intense relationships with such learned friends as Muriel Rukeyser and Louise Bogan, and her secret turmoil over her sexuality. But ultimately, we see Sarton begin to create in her works the image of a strong, independent woman who lived peacefully with solitude--an image that often contradicted the reality of her life.Margot Peters has been Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin and holds a Ph.D. in Victorian literature. She is the author ofCharlotte Brontë: Style in the Novel, Unquiet Soul: A Biography of Charlotte Brontë, Bernard Shaw and the Actresses, The House of Barrymore, andMrs. Pat: The Life of Mrs. Patrick Campbell. She lives in Lake Mills, Wisconsin.CHAPTER 1 Wondelgem: 1911–1914
For May Sarton, the house in Belgium where she was born would always be a lost paradise.
It stood in flat countryside about five kilometers north of the Flemish city of Ghent in the ancient village of Wondelgem, beautiful in its simplicity and harmony of line. A red tile roof overhung two stucco stories opened to the air and sun by large casements flanked by shutters. Glass entrance doors sheltered a roofed porch with benches inside, Englisl“–