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      • Sarah Orne Jewett (born September 3, 1849, South Berwick, Maine, U.S.—died June 24, 1909, South Berwick) was an American writer of regional fiction that centers on life in Maine.
      www.britannica.com/biography/Sarah-Orne-Jewett
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  2. Though she grew up in the midst of this congenial and bustling household, and played a full role in family activities, Jewett still remembered her childhood as "solitary." She developed an early passion for reading, a habit easily indulged since both of her parents were voracious readers and their house was overflowing with books.

  3. Early life. Sarah Orne Jewett was born in South Berwick, Maine, on September 3, 1849. Her family had been residents of New England for many generations. [2]

  4. Aug 30, 2024 · Sarah Orne Jewett (1849–1909) was an American writer of regional fiction that centers on life in Maine. Willa Cather praised her The Country of the Pointed Firs (1896) as one of American literature’s most enduring books.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Sarah Orne Jewett Biography Highlights
    • Genteel Beginnings in Rural Maine
    • A Country Doctor’S Daughter
    • Deephaven and A Succession of Respected Works
    • Work Habits and Personality
    • A Perfect Partnership with Annie Adams Fields
    • Admired by Margaret Chase Smith
    • Later Years and The Legacy of Sarah Orne Jewett
    • Revisiting Jewett in A 1994 Collection
    • More About Sarah Orne Jewett
    Jewett grew up in South Berwick, Maine, the daughter of a country doctor who took her on his rounds and encouraged her love of the people and places they visited.
    Though she traveled widely throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe, Jewett’s writing exemplifies regionalism in fiction.
    Her first book, Deephaven (1877), and later, The Country of Pointed Firs(1896) made an art of loosely linked stories that were more impressionistic than plotted narratives.
    Jewett never married, once writing to a friend that she needed a wife more than a husband. When her editor died, she lived with his wife, Annie Adams Fields, in what was termed a “Boston marriage.”

    Jewett lived and died in the same South Berwick colonial home owned by her grandfather, a prosperous ship builder. Throughout her childhood, she encountered ship captains who visited the family home to report on their voyages. Later in her life, she would observe: “You must know the whole world before you know the village.” Growing up, she was deep...

    Jewett seemed to have gained as much knowledge of people and places by accompanying her father as he did his calls to neighboring farms and villages in the area. M.A. DeWolfe Howe offers a lovely sketch of her formative years in the 1952 book, Who Lived Here: From her father she learned most of all. His studious tastes led him not into business but...

    Though she herself traveled widely throughout the U.S., Canada, and Europe, Jewett’s writing is a fine example of regionalism in fiction. Her descriptive stories focused on life in rural Maine — South Berwick became the “Deephaven” and “Dunnet Landing” of her works. Her first book was Deephaven(1877), a collection of stories that were more impressi...

    The aforementioned 1901 article presented a glimpse into Sarah Orne Jewett’s work habits and personality: “There are few authoresses in this country who can turn out a good story as rapidly as Miss Jewett. She frequently writes 10,000 words a day, and many a delightful magazine sketch has been completed at a single sitting. She is very systematic, ...

    Sarah Orne Jewett never married, once wrote to a friend that she needed a wife more than a husband. She had a close friendship with Annie Adams Fields, another writer, and the wife of James T. Fields, an editor with whom she was associated. When James Fields died, Sarah and Annie, who was fifteen years her senior, lived together until the end of Je...

    Margaret Chase Smith (1897 – 1995) was the first woman to serve in both chambers of the U.S. congress, representing Maine. She wrote in tribute to Jewett, her fellow Mainer: “Sarah Orne Jewett, a favorite author of mine, has said, ‘Write not a word too many nor a word too few.’ Her writings prove her philosophy, as in my early days I found when rea...

    Throughout her life, Sarah Jewett maintained the home in her beloved South Berwick, Maine, but also lived in Boston. She enjoyed being part of a wide circle of friends who were interested in literature and general culture. The rheumatoid arthritis she developed while still young continued to plague her throughout her life. She often was debilitated...

    In 1994, the same year that Paula Blanchard’s biography appeared, a 937-page tome amassing her best-known work (three novels and more than twenty short stories was published by Library of America. Titled Jewett: Novels and Stories, reviewer Naomi Schneider in the San Francisco Examiner (December 11, 1994) observed: “Its publication signals Jewett’s...

    On this site 1. Dear Literary Ladies: How can a writer balance solitude and camaraderie? 2. Wise Quotes by Sarah Orne Jewett 3. 6 Homes of Classic Women Authors to Visit in New England Major Works (selected) 1. Deephaven(1877) 2. A Country Doctor (1884) 3. A Marsh Island(1884) 4. A White Heron and Other Stories (1886) 5. Strangers and Wayfarers (18...

  5. Born in 1849 in the coastal town of South Berwick, Maine, Sarah Orne Jewett grew up accompanying her father, a doctor, on rounds across the rural countryside. She was educated at South Berwick Academy, graduating in 1866.

  6. BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION. Jewett was born September 3, 1849, in the rural port community of South Berwick, Maine, the daughter of Theodore H. Jewett, a wealthy and respected physician, and Caroline F. Perry.

  7. Jul 28, 2021 · Theodora Sarah Orne Jewett (b. 1849–d. 1909) grew up in South Berwick, Maine, the middle daughter of a respected physician, Theodore F. Jewett, and Caroline Perry Jewett, both of distinguished and prosperous local families.