Jerry Junior: An Edwardian Romantic Comedy of Mistaken Identity, American Tourists, and Sunlit Italian Resort Society
Synopsis
Set amid the sunlit hotels, gardens, and social rituals of expatriate Italy, Jean Webster's Jerry Junior is a deft Edwardian comedy of manners built on romance, mistaken identity, and the playful collision of American energy with Old World atmosphere. Its prose is brisk, observant, and theatrically arranged, favoring lively dialogue and comic reversals over melodrama. Within the tradition of transatlantic fiction, Webster transforms the Italian picturesque into a stage for youth, flirtation, and self-invention. Jean Webster, born Alice Jane Chandler Webster in 1876, brought to her fiction the advantages of Vassar education, extensive travel, and a keen awareness of women's changing social possibilities. A grandniece of Mark Twain, she inherited a family intimacy with literary culture, yet developed her own voice: humane, witty, and alert to institutional convention. Her interest in independent young women and social performance clearly informs this early romantic entertainment. Jerry Junior is recommended to readers who enjoy elegant light fiction with intelligence beneath its charm. Admirers of Webster's Daddy-Long-Legs will find here the same vivacity, warmth, and comic precision in a more openly romantic mode.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Sharp Ink
- ISBN: 9788028372439
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 4 mm
- Weight: 125g
- Languages: English
