Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Fanny Stevenson. Frances Matilda Van de Grift Osbourne Stevenson (10 March 1840 – 18 February 1914) was an American magazine writer. [1] [2] She became a supporter and later the wife of Robert Louis Stevenson, and the mother of Isobel Osbourne, Samuel Lloyd Osbourne, and Hervey Stewart Osbourne. [3] Early life.

  2. Fanny Stevenson was the first wife of Robert Louis Stevenson, the author of Treasure Island and other classics. She was a painter, a traveler, and a writer herself. Learn about her life, her family, her art, and her legacy at the Robert Louis Stevenson Museum.

    • Fanny Stevenson1
    • Fanny Stevenson2
    • Fanny Stevenson3
    • Fanny Stevenson4
  3. Fanny Stevenson was an artist, adventurer, and caretaker who married the famous writer Robert Louis Stevenson in 1880. She defied convention, supported him through his illnesses, and influenced his works, despite the criticism and disapproval of his family and friends.

  4. 25 de out. de 2000 · John Ezard. Tue 24 Oct 2000 22.27 EDT. One of the enduring mysteries of English literature was solved last night when it emerged that the first, impassioned draft of Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr...

  5. 11 de mai. de 1993 · Fanny Stevenson: A Romance of Destiny. Alexandra Lapierre, Carol Cosman (Translator) 4.21. 135 ratings28 reviews. Providing a clear, accurate picture of the woman behind the genius, an incisive biography of the wife of Robert Louis Stevenson traces Fanny Stevenson's life from her early years in America to her days after his death.

    • (135)
    • Hardcover
  6. 29 de nov. de 2010 · Fanny Stevenson : a romance of destiny. First published in France where it caused a literary sensation and became an instant bestseller, this is Alexandra Lapierre's celebrated, award-winning biography of Robert Louis Stevenson's wife.

  7. – – – , Fanny Stevenson: Entre passion et liberté (Paris: Robert Laffont, 1993). [Portrays Fanny as an adventurous woman even without RLS’s influence. Inserts a large number of fictionalized narrative scenes. See also Jean-Pierre Naugrette, Studies in Scottish Literature 28 (1993), pp. 250-53.]