Mary J. Holmes (1825–1907)
Author of The English Orphans, or, A Home in the New World
About the Author
Image credit: Mary Jane Hawes Holmes (1825 or 1828-1907), Buffalo Electrotype and Engraving Co., Buffalo, N.Y.
Works by Mary J. Holmes
The Tracy diamonds 4 copies
Daisy Thornton {and} Jessie Graham 3 copies
Rena's Experiment 3 copies
The Merivale Banks 3 copies
Paul Ralston 3 copies
Cousin Hugh 3 copies
Leighton homestead 2 copies
Connie's Mistake 1 copy
The abandoned farm 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Hawes, Mary Jane (birth)
- Birthdate
- 1825-04-05
- Date of death
- 1907-10-06
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- novelist
short story writer - Short biography
- Mary Jane Holmes, née Hawes, was born in Brookfield, Massachusetts to a family with modest circumstances. Her father died when she was 12 years old, and she went to work as a school teacher at 13. She began writing and storytelling at an early age, and published her first story in a local newspaper at 15. In 1849, she married Daniel Holmes and moved with him to Versailles, Kentucky, where they both taught for a few years. The small towns and people she met there served as the inspiration for her novels set in the antebellum South.
In 1852, the couple settled in Brockport, near Rochester, New York. She gave up teaching to devote herself to her writing. In 1854, she published her first novel, Tempest and Sunshine, which became her most popular book. She traveled extensively in Europe and the Far East, collecting art and continuing to write and publish about one book a year until her death. Altogether, she wrote 39 novels, plus short stories and novellas. Many of her works appeared first in serial form or were first published in periodicals such as the New York Weekly, Lippincott’s, and the Atlantic Monthly. She sold a total of two million books in her lifetime, making her popularity in her day second only to that of Harriet Beecher Stowe. - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Brookfield, Massachusetts, USA
- Places of residence
- Brookfield, Massachusetts, USA (birth)
Versailles, Kentucky, USA
Brockport, New York, USA - Place of death
- Brockport, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
This was similar to Millbank (which I liked). Perhaps its because I tend to be biased against blondes (a feeling Holmes seems to share). It has its failings--but was an interesting study in the 19th century mentality. I prefer Alcott's frankness to her unwillingness to be forthright.
I was absolutely blown away by this novel. A delicate mix of Stowe, Alcott, and Montgomery, I found it to be delightfully unpretentious. I was glad that I tried this posthumous referral from Laura Ingalls Wilder.
Talk about a soap! You name it? It happened. (Okay-- not quite.) I was exhausted emotionally and didn't care at the end because I didn't have any emotions left.
Marian is an orphan, raised in genteel circumstances by an unrelated guardian, Mr. Raymond. On his death bed he states his wishes that 15-year-old Marian marry his son, Frederic. Mr. Raymond tells Frederic the same thing. There is a secret involved here, a secret that Frederic knows but Marian does not. Frederic is in love with someone else but marries Marian because of this secret. Marian finds out this secret right after the wedding ceremony and flees. The rest of the book is spent with show more both Marian’s and Frederic’s various adventures and personal growth until they are reunited at the end of the book.
This is the third book by Mary J. Holmes that I’ve read, and I think the melodrama level is a little high in her work generally. In this book there are mistaken identities, people in love with people who love someone else, letters given to the wrong person, orphans with fortunes, and a whole lot of illness involving fevers where the person might live or die. But I also enjoyed reading a book in which the main characters recognized their weaknesses and worked at their own improvement. People were expected to behave well towards others, and all of the characters who misbehaved received the consequences of and later came to regret their actions.
This book looks like it was originally published in 1863, and the author lived in the south during the Civil War. The times and the author's experiences are reflected in this work.
I would recommend it to others who are looking for lighter reading. show less
This is the third book by Mary J. Holmes that I’ve read, and I think the melodrama level is a little high in her work generally. In this book there are mistaken identities, people in love with people who love someone else, letters given to the wrong person, orphans with fortunes, and a whole lot of illness involving fevers where the person might live or die. But I also enjoyed reading a book in which the main characters recognized their weaknesses and worked at their own improvement. People were expected to behave well towards others, and all of the characters who misbehaved received the consequences of and later came to regret their actions.
This book looks like it was originally published in 1863, and the author lived in the south during the Civil War. The times and the author's experiences are reflected in this work.
I would recommend it to others who are looking for lighter reading. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 69
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 1,452
- Popularity
- #17,698
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 13
- ISBNs
- 178














