A fair and gentle woman's past thought for a gentle woman at Ive Smith's fair, Ivey Low, Ivey Low always has a attachment to her past. This affection is one of the theme of the novel. This is one of the main reasons for her writing and one reason why she does something because she does not want to lose control of the past. In Lee Smith's Fair and Tender Ladies, Ivy Rowe uses letters to manage the past and where she was born. In the letter from Sugar Fork, Ivy wrote that there are many reasons.
& Lt; Tab / & gt; Ivey Row is a lonely mountain house, bred in illusion of stories and love. For that reason I believed that life outside the sugar fork is a fairy land like the book she read. Despite the difficulties, Ivy always chose to romantically see the severity of reality. That is the tendency to fall in love with her. In the novel, Ivy found a different love, each reflecting her life at that time. The tenderness of the whole lease miss fair and gentle women plays a very important role in the life of Ivy.
My mother is part of a writer, person, concept in my novel, such as the practicality of Benjamin Franklin in autobiography, farm village wisdom of Ivy Rowe of Lee Smith, Mr. Gentle, Thoreau novel, etc. . Pursuit of Walden's simple life We share with her the fact that many "educated" people have learned the skills and knowledge that she admires. My sister shared my mother's wisdom with her third grade classroom. My brother regularly holds business talks in Portland, Oregon, about the mother's anecdote and what inspires someone she will never meet. He gave all his honor to his mother as he compares his experience in the South with the solution to the company's problem. Mothers with a high literacy rate acquired were not necessarily from high school in a short period of time or from universities, but were born from interactions and reactions with living.
Once upon a time, in a distant land, a fair woman planned to make an academic debate: her fair women colleagues published her future work of a fair female writer of the 18th century published by the University of Cambridge Press I talked about. A fair women colleague has been working on this version for the first time in six years, the first scholarly version of a female female writer's work.