The
Cassique of Kiawah
A Colonial Romance
Selected Fiction of William Gilmore Simms
Arkansas Edition
Edited with an Afterword, Historical and Textual Commentary, and
Notes by Kevin Collins
Introduction by John Caldwell Guilds
Series Editor
First drafted as a novel called Oyster Point when the author
was only eighteen, The Cassique of Kiawah was finally published
thirty-five years later, in 1859, at the height of William Gilmore
Simmss career. It is a history through fiction of early Charleston,
South Carolina, and completed Simmss series of Revolutionary
War novels. Through satire and realism he portrays the charm and the
corruption of late seventeenth-century Charleston society, and he
contrasts the quiet majesty of the wilderness with the violence of
man. The book was widely reviewed and highly praised, and it confirmed
Simmss position as the nations best-known novelist.
It is cause for rejoicing that another volume . . . is now
added to the University of Arkansas Presss distinguished series.
I cannot imagine a more important editorial and publishing project
in the field of nineteenth-century literature. With good texts available
for the first time in a century or more, it is possible for critics,
scholars, students, and general readers to study, understand, and
re-evaluate this most neglected and underrated of American writers.
James B. Meriwether,
McClintock Emeritus Professor of Southern Letters, University of South Carolina
The best scenes in Cassique are exceptional, perhaps
unique. They are painted in colors so vivid and with such a confident
and practiced hand that the result is a work in which the highly
exciting and realistic narrative movement is enhanced by what may
be Simmss finest achievement in description and imagery.
Anne Blythe Merriwether,
Immediate Past President of the William Gilmore Simms Society
2003
6"x9"
600 pages
$34.95, paper (s)
1-55728-762-7
Kevin Collins is an assistant professor of English at the
State University of West Georgia. John Caldwell Guilds is
Distinguished Professor in Humanities at the University of
Arkansas. He has published extensively on Simms and has served
as the editor of many of his works.
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