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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In three pages this book report on Isabel Allende’s Daughter of Fortune includes background information on the author, the novel’s historical context, book summary, and writer’s personal recommendation. There are no additional sources listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGdaughfor.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in Lima, Peru, Allende began her literary career as a magazine editor before penning her first novel, the literary masterpiece The House of the Spirits, in 1982. After receiving
immediate popular and critical acclaim utilizing a storytelling style known as magical realism (the incorporation of magical or seemingly fantastic events into realistic situations), Allende wrote steadily until her daughter
Paulas tragic death from a blood disorder in 1992. Her autobiographical text Paula, which was written in the style of a letter to her then-comatose daughter, was published in
1995. Allendes grief over her daughters illness and death plunged her into a deep depression and severe writers block, which lasted years until the publication of her novel Daughter
of Fortune in 2000. Daughter of Fortune is a lovingly crafted tale, which is set within the historical context of the mid-eighteenth century during the height of the California
Gold Rush hysteria. Subdivided into three sections, Part One (1843-1848) focuses upon Chilean protagonist Eliza Sommers background and orphaned childhood in Valparaiso, raised by Victorian imperialists, spinster Rose Sommers
and her brothers Jeremy and John. Sailor John is a rather remote figure, who has a woman in every port, but factors prominently into Elizas later life. The
first part is also when Eliza falls in love with Joaquin Andieta, who dreams of ending the extreme poverty in which he and his mother are forced to live by
traveling to California and striking gold. As far as he was concerned, "This was a matter of life and death. Life as he understood it lay in California;
to stay trapped in Chile was to condemn himself to a slow death" (Allende 141). While he is gone, Eliza discovers she is pregnant, and decides to journey to
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