Letters to Sophia

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'Queeney'Thrale
19th century history
A01=Kate Chisholm
A01=Loren Rothschild
Abergele
AdmiralLordKeith
ArthurMurphy
Author_Kate Chisholm
Author_Loren Rothschild
Bath
BodylwyddanCastle
Botallack
Category=DND
Category=DS
Category=DSB
CharlesMaturin
Clifton
DavidGarrick
Dr Samuel Johnson
DrJohnson
DruryLane
Dryden
early nineteenth century
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
family drama
Frankenstein
Gabriel Piozzi
GabrielPiozzi
Georgian
Georgian world
Gout
Hester Thrale
HesterLynchPiozzi
HesterThrale
Hoare'sBank
JoannaBaillie
JohnGay
LadyEleanorButler
letters from Hester Thrale
Llangollen
LondonSteamboats
LordByron
Marmion
MaryShelley
MelmothTheWanderer
MissO'Neill
MissPonsonby
Napoleon
Napoleonic era
Napoleonic history
Napoleonic wars
nineteenth century history
Penzance
PrinceOfWales
RobertSouth
SamuelJohnson
SarahSiddons
Sophia Thrale Hoare
SophiaThraleHoare
Stourhead
TheatreRoyal
WalterScott
Waverley
women's history
women's independence

Product details

  • ISBN 9781836360131
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Kulturalis
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The chance discovery of letters from Hester Thrale (1741–1821) to her daughter Sophia provides an opportunity to rethink our understanding of one of the key people in the life of the dictionary-maker and moralist Dr Samuel Johnson. Much-maligned after the death of her first husband for her decision to marry Gabriel Piozzi, an Italian musician and Catholic, Hester has often been portrayed as cold-hearted and lacking in the essentials of motherhood. These letters shed new light on her relations with her four surviving daughters (she gave birth to 12 children in 14 years). They also reveal her desire for recognition as a scholar and poet, and her keen awareness of her shortcomings. They provide a fascinating portrait of a complex woman, determining her independence and that of her daughters, in spite of family tragedy and vicious criticism in the press.

Kate Chisholm is the author of Fanny Burney: Her Life and Wits and Wives: Dr Johnson in the Company of Women. She has written biographical essays on the Burney family for The Cambridge Companion to Frances Burney, on Mary Wollstonecraft for Mary Wollstonecraft in Context and on her family’s connection with India for The Last Bungalow: Writings from Allahabad. A former fellow of the Royal Literary Fund, she was the radio critic of The Spectator for 13 years. 

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