Janet Hobhouse Explained

Janet Hobhouse
Birth Date:27 March 1948
Birth Place:New York City, US
Death Place:New York City, US
Notableworks:Everybody Who Was Anybody, The Furies
Relatives:Henry Hobhouse (father)

Janet Hobhouse (March 27, 1948[1] – February 1, 1991) was an American novelist, biographer and editor. She is the author of four novels, including the posthumously published The Furies. Her first published work was a biography of Gertrude Stein, Everybody Who was Anybody. She was a contributing editor to ARTnews and also published a monograph on artists' representation of the female nude in the twentieth century. Born in New York City to Henry Hobhouse and Frances Liedloff, she attended the Spence School and Oxford University. Hobhouse was married to journalist and film maker Nick Fraser from January 18, 1974, until their divorce in 1983.[1]

The Furies

Hobhouse died in 1991 at the age of 42 from cancer.[2] [3] Her celebrated novel The Furies was published two years later. In the New York Times, Michiko Kakutani called the novel a “beautiful—and profoundly affecting—meditation on love and death and family.” In the Los Angeles Times, writer and critic Daphne Merkin described the reading experience as “extraordinary ... a stunning heartbreaker of a book, shot through with pellucid sadness.”

In 2004, The Furies was reissued by New York Review of Books Classics, with an introduction by Merkin.

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Inventory to the Janet Hobhouse Papers. February 5, 2020. Fernanda Perrone. June 1994.
  2. News: Janet Hobhouse, 42, A Novelist and Editor. April 10, 2016. New York Times. February 4, 1991.
  3. News: Vidal. John. Henry Hobhouse obituary. April 10, 2016. The Guardian. April 10, 2016.