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Charlotte Gordon

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Charlotte Gordon is an American writer and distinguished professor of humanities at Endicott College.

She was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1962, and received her B.A in English and American Literature from Harvard College. She received her M.A in Creative Writing and her Ph.D in Literature from Boston University.[1]

She was awarded the Massachusetts Book Award for non-fiction for her biography of the seventeenth-century poet, Anne Bradstreet, Mistress Bradstreet: The Untold Life of America's First Poet.[2] This was followed by The Woman Who Named God: Abraham's Dilemma and the Birth of Three Faiths,[3] which in the author's own words describes the "shadows, gaps and silences" in the biblical texts about Abraham, Sarah and Hagar.[4] Examining them as stories, and drawing on the Bible both as a source of literature and religion, she notes that "some of the most crucial western ideas about freedom come from Hagar".[5]

Her most recent book, Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley (2015), is about the mother and daughter pair of writers. The first Mary died giving birth to the second in 1797, and the Guardian said that the biography did a creditable job of binding them together again. It was favourably reviewed in the Wall Street Journal as well.[6] Romantic Outlaws was the BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week on August 10, 2015,[7] and won the 2016 National Book Critics Circle Award.[8]

See also

  • Lyndall Gordon, also a literary biographer of Wollstonecraft (2005) and of mother-daughter pairs

References

  1. ^ Endicott College Profile Archived 2010-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Massachusetts Book Award: Mistress Bradstreet "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2010-07-23. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ Review of The Woman Who Named God
  4. ^ Gordon, Charlotte (2009) The Woman Who Named God: Abraham's Dilemma and the Birth of Three Faiths. New York: Little, Brown, xv
  5. ^ Gordon, Charlotte (2009) The Woman Who Named God: Abraham's Dilemma and the Birth of Three Faiths. New York: Little, Brown, xiv
  6. ^ http://www.wsj.com/articles/vindication-of-a-righteous-woman-1437163449
  7. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b064xjn1
  8. ^ Alexandra Alter (March 17, 2016). "'The Sellout' Wins National Book Critics Circle's Fiction Award". New York Times. Retrieved March 18, 2016.