Ann sophia stephens biography
She was the author of dime novels and is credited as the progenitor of that genre.
Ann Sophia Stephens (), was an.
He was the manager of a woolen mill owned by Col. David Humphreys. Her mother died early and she was brought up by her mother's sister, who eventually became her stepmother. She was educated at a dame school in South Britain, Connecticut, and started writing at an early age. Edward established a grocery business in Portland.
When it failed, Stephens and her husband co-founded Portland Magazine , with herself as editor and him as publisher. Author and critic John Neal , whom she met shortly after her arrival in Portland, mentored her in this undertaking. When Edward secured an appointment at a New York City custom house , the couple moved to that city.
Stephens garnered influence in New York literary circles and took on editorial positions with a number of the city's periodicals. Over the next few years she wrote more than twenty-five serial novels plus short stories and poems for several well known periodicals which included Godey's Lady's Book and Graham's Magazine. She started her own magazine Mrs Stephens' Illustrated New Monthly in , it was published by her husband.
The novel was a reprint of Stephens's earlier serial that appeared in the Ladies' Companion magazine in February, March, and April Later, the Grolier Club listed Malaeska as the most influential book of Contents move to sidebar hide. Article Talk.