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Joscelyn: A Tale of the RevolutionNovel (Romance) | The Reprint Company | 1975, 1976 Although written and
published last among his eight Revolutionary novels in 1867, Joscelyn should be
placed first in the series chronologically, for it lays out the preliminaries
and “origins of this partisan conflict.”[1] Set in the final six months of 1775, the
romance depicts the beginnings of the Revolutionary conflict between patriots
and loyalists in the backcountries of Georgia and South Carolina. Simms mixed
historical figures, such as William Henry Drayton and Thomas Browne, with
fictional ones to illustrate the dramatic tensions and implications of the
early partisan ... |
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Joscelyn: A Tale of the RevolutionNovel (Romance) | U of South Carolina P | 1975 Although written and
published last among his eight Revolutionary novels in 1867, Joscelyn should be
placed first in the series chronologically, for it lays out the preliminaries
and “origins of this partisan conflict.”[1] Set in the final six months of 1775, the
romance depicts the beginnings of the Revolutionary conflict between patriots
and loyalists in the backcountries of Georgia and South Carolina. Simms mixed
historical figures, such as William Henry Drayton and Thomas Browne, with
fictional ones to illustrate the dramatic tensions and implications of the
early partisan ... |
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The Damsel of DarienNovel (Romance) | Lea and Blanchard | 1839 The Damsel of Darien was published in
two volumes in 1839. Simms first mentioned
the story to James Lawson in a 2 September 1838 letter, revealing that he
“wrote during the first part of the summer some 150 pages of a new novel &
there it sticks.”[1] Simms informed Lawson in January of 1839 that
Damsel would be published with Lea
& Blanchard of Philadelphia, who would pay $1000 for a first edition of
3,000 copies; in the meantime, Simms was busy revising the “numerous errors of
history & geography” committed while composing the first volume of the story.[2] ... |
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The Lily and the Totem, or, The Huguenots in FloridaNovel (Romance) | Baker and Scribner | 1850 While it largely fell out of the
public consciousness after the author’s death, Simms’s The Lily and the Totem is one of his most intriguing works, both
because of its overall quality and its experimentation with the possibilities
of mixing history and fiction. While The Lily and the Totem is a story of
French Huguenots in sixteenth-century Florida, it is not, importantly, a
historical romance. Rather, Simms here
experimented with a new way in which to relate history—by telling history
through fictionalized narratives that fill in the gaps between what we do and
do ... |
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The Yemassee. A Romance of Carolina.Novel (Romance) | Harper & Brothers | 1835 The Yemassee is historically the best known of
the long fictions of William Gilmore Simms.
Set on the South Carolina frontier, Simms’s third book-length fiction
treats the Yemassee War of 1715-17, when the Yemassee Indians, with their
Spanish and Native American allies, attacked the low country colonial
settlements. Writing in the midst of the
removal of natives from east of the Mississippi to the newly created Indian
Territory in the future Oklahoma, Simms emphasized such motives for the war as
the colonists’ need for land, the conflict between rival European powers ... |