Lawrie Todd
Or the Settlers in the Woods
John Galt author Regina Hewitt editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:31st Jul '23
Should be back in stock very soon
A former revolutionary Scotsman achieves prosperity in New York through hard work and social networking Scholarly edition that distinguishes the 1832 text from the 1830 texts and presents it with a glossary of Scottish terms and historical notes Introduction that examines Galt's techniques for combining fiction with lived experience and that provides contextual information about emigration from Scotland, political reform in Britain, and socio-economic conditions and aspirations in New York at the beginning of the nineteenth century Maps that enable readers to put together the novel's imaginary and actual locations In Lawrie Todd (1830; rev. ed. 1832), John Galt paints an optimistic portrait of Scottish emigration to North America. Designed as a fictional autobiography, the novel charts the fortunes of its protagonist from his departure from Scotland to avoid being tried for treason over his French Revolutionary sympathies to his rise to prosperity as a shopkeeper in New York City and imaginary towns near Rochester. This edition of the novel provides a contextual introduction, explanatory notes and maps that connect Todd's life story with boom times in New York and with Galt's own efforts at social entrepreneurship in Canada as well as with debates over emigration and political reforms in Britain. It sheds light on Galt's methods of characterisation, including his use of Scots and Yankee" speech habits and adaptation of real-life models, and on his popularity with readers in his own time. "
"At last! A scholarly edition of Lawrie Todd, nineteenth-century best-seller and pioneering British novel of American immigration and pioneer life. A Scottish radical becomes a successful frontier businessman: John Galt's characteristic wit and bite is matched only by Regina Hewitt's imaginative editorial detective work." -Katie Trumpener, Yale University
ISBN: 9781474460576
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
544 pages