Widely regarded as the best of Hamlin Garland’s novels, Rose of Dutcher’s Coolly tells the story of a country girl of precocious ability who is raised by her widower father on a small
Wisconsin farm. She wants to be a poet and eventually attends the university, where her talent is encouraged. A carefully crafted defense of the New Woman, the first generation of women to
achieve economic and social independence, Rose of Dutcher’s Coolly deals with issues that are still with us—the nature of femininity, the problem of reconciling career and family, the
meaning of “love,” and the need for equal opportunity. Above all, it records a nineteenth-century man’s vision of a world that still eludes us, one in which men and women are equal partners.
This edition reprints the text of the 1895 printing and includes an introduction that places the novel in the historical context of the early feminist movement.