George's Mother Explained

George's Mother
Author:Stephen Crane
Language:English
Genre:Fiction
Set In:New York City
Publisher:Edward Arnold
Pub Date:1896
Media Type:Print
Pages:177

George's Mother is a novel by American novelist Stephen Crane, first published in 1896. The novel is a companion piece to Crane's earlier novel , and the title character of that work makes a brief appearance.

Background

Stephen Crane began writing George's Mother in 1893 and finished it in November 1894. However, because its companion novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets did poorly commercially, he did not submit it for publication until 1896.[1] Its original title was A Woman Without Weapons.[2]

After Crane finished George's Mother, he wrote to fellow writer Hamlin Garland, triumphantly: "I have just completed a New York book that leaves Maggie at the post. It is my best thing.".[3] Critics of the time, however, were less impressed; Harry Thurston Peck wrote that Crane should not "ask us to accept his old bones and junk as virgin gold." The book was also criticized, like Maggie, for its frank depictions of vice; the sentence "for he had known women of the city's painted legions" was removed from a draft.[4] One champion of the book, however, was Crane's mentor William Dean Howells, who praised what he called its "mastery" and "extraordinary insight."

The Student Companion to Stephen Crane argues that the character of George's mother was based on Crane's own mother, a member of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and that George may have been modeled on Crane's alcoholic brother Stephen.

Plot

George's Mother details the life of George Kelcey and his mother, who live in the same lower Manhattan tenement house as Maggie from Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. George is an immature man inclined toward melodrama, and his mother constantly berates him in an attempt to make him change his ways, telling him to get a job and go to church.

George is infatuated with Maggie, but when Maggie takes up with another man, he turns to drinking heavily. At a party, George and his drinking buddies get into an altercation, and his friends abandon him. He joins a local gang, but the gang also abandons him when he visits his dying mother instead of joining a fight with them. The story ends with George's mother hallucinating and screaming with George present.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sorrentino . Paul . Student Companion to Stephen Crane . 2006 . Greenwood Press . 9780313331046 . 29 March 2023.
  2. Book: Sorrentino . Paul . Stephen Crane: A Life of Fire . 5 June 2014 . Harvard University Press . 9780674049536 . 165 . 29 March 2023.
  3. Orlov . Paul A. . Psychology, style, and the cityscape in Stephen Crane's "George's Mother" . CLA Journal . December 1990 . 34 . 2 . 212–227.
  4. Book: Berryman . John . Stephen Crane: A Critical Biography . October 1982 . Farrar, Straus and Giroux . 9781466808065 . 29 March 2023.