Catherine Sedgwick's novel "New England Story" is the story of an orphan, Yan Elton, who is fighting to protect integrity and dignity among family members. This story occurred in the 1820s when many children were living quietly. Because it is actually impossible for people to understand their badness. It is to understand what is going on in their house.
Catherine Maria Sedgwick (1789-1867) may have created a genre of domestic novels focusing on the role of women in the home environment in "New England Story" (1822), providing moral lessons. Like most novels of this type, orphan actors transcend her own circumstances and even rely on her internal resources, including faith, industry and wisdom, to support himself as a teacher. But the story ended with a wealthy husband who bought a heroine's childhood house and she lost her early novels due to her parents' death and bankruptcy. This novel follows the Cinderella story about the riches of wealth through wealthy husbands, but it also highlights the role of education, independence, and morality in women's success. Sedgwick chased this first novel, including Redwood (1824), Clarence (1830), Lynn Woods (1835).
From the 1920s to the 1850s, Catherine Sedgwick had a great demand and led a good life to short stories written in various journals. As a boyhood novel, a moral story, a family literature, and countless novel writers, Sedgwick says New England before her novel "Hope Leslie" (her most popular work) I am a respected person. Literary figures. In her work, Catherine Sedgwick showed consistent tolerance to minority members. The main character of her first novel "New England Story" (1822) is Quaker. A small part of Redwood (1824) was involved in the shaker community, and Sedgwick analyzed the psychological pressure to keep members in groups, but religion was never criticized. Likewise, Leslie (1827) is expected to show a sympathetic understanding of Native American and its religious beliefs.