
This biography opens by weaving together Hawthorne’s own notebooks, the vivid recollections of his close friends, and previously unpublished memoirs to paint a nuanced portrait of the writer’s formative years. The author carefully separates myth from fact, correcting long‑held errors about family lineage and early incidents, while offering fresh insights drawn from meticulous archival research. Readers are invited to follow Hawthorne’s childhood and adolescence as they unfold against a backdrop of New England’s evolving cultural landscape.
Set primarily in Salem, the narrative captures the city’s distinctive blend of maritime prosperity, aristocratic refinement, and austere religious life that shaped the young Hawthorne’s imagination. The author’s prose balances scholarly detail with an accessible, storytelling tone, allowing listeners to feel the texture of eighteenth‑century streets, churches, and households. By the end of the first act, the stage is set for understanding how the environment and family history seeded the themes that would later define Hawthorne’s literary genius.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (635K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Michelle Shephard, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1846–1917
A Boston writer with deep roots in American reform movements, he became known for lively biographical studies of major public figures and for a close, firsthand portrait of Charles Sumner. His work blends literary criticism, history, and political memory from the decades after the Civil War.
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