Description
MP3 Audio CD. The owner of a new boarding school for girls, Mabel Wilcox, is introduced with the affluent Conway Fitzgibbon, who sends his feeble daughter to be enrolled in the new school. When Mabel Wilcox makes a probe on the background of the prestigious Fitzgibbon family, she was surprised when she learned that there was no Fitzgibbon family at all. An alleged Matilda Fitzgibbon is a made up heiress. Mabel Wilcox needs to do something. This fiction was published and prefaced by Charlotte Brontë's editor, W. M. Thackeray, after the author died. These two chapters are the only surviving fragments of the story of Emma, the story Brontë wrote until she departed life. Later on, it has been finished two times by different novelists. Charlotte Brontë was born on April 21, 1816 and died on March 31, 1855. She was a British author and poet, the eldest of the three Brontë sisters who subsisted into womanhood and whose fictions have become masterpieces of British collected works. She first released her writings such as her most famous story, Jane Eyre, under her fictitious name, Currer Bell. Charlotte Brontë was born in Thornton, west of Bradford in the West Riding of Yorkshire, the third of the six children of Maria Branwell and Patrick Brontë whose surname was once Brunty or Prunty, an Irish Anglican ecclesiastic. After a few years, her family went several miles to the town of Haworth, where her father became a perpetual curate of Saint Michael and All Angels Church. Her mother, Maria, died of cancer, and her sister, Elizabeth Branwell became the guardian of her five daughters namely, Maria, Elizabeth, Charlotte, Emily and Anne, and a son, Branwell. Charlotte was also known for her novels such as Shirley, Villette, Emma Brown, Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell, Selected Poems of the Brontës, and Everyman Poetry.
NZ$33.23
Ships from IDB Productions (California, United States)