V.V.'s Eyes explained

V.V.'s Eyes
Author:Henry Sydnor Harrison
Illustrator:Raymond M. Crosby (4 in original edition)
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Houghton Mifflin Company
Pub Date:May 1913
Media Type:Print (hardcover)
Pages:509

V.V.'s Eyes is a 1913 novel by Henry Sydnor Harrison, which was the second-best selling book in the United States for 1913, and is considered one of Harrison's best novels, along with 1911's Queed.[1]

Later criticism has considered the novel (and other work of Harrison) to have pro-feminist themes.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Hart, James D. with Phillip W. Leininger. The Oxford Companion to American Literature, p. 274 (6th ed. 1995)
  2. MacDonald, Edgar E. Henry Sydnor Harrison: Southern Feminist, in The Southern Literary Journal, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Fall, 1980), pp. 42-54.
  3. (25 October 2010). V.V.'s Eyes (2010 review), Redeeming Qualities
  4. (1 June 1913). V.V.'s Eyes. Hr. Henry S. Harrison's Novel of American Society, The New York Times
  5. (29 June 1913) Topics of the Week, The New York Times
  6. Wagner, Mary Swain (28 September 1913). Views of Readers (letter to paper), The New York Times