* A huge Thank You to Julia Gasper for sending me a copy of their book, in exchange for an honest review!
Born in France, around 1720, Anne-Marie Fauques de Vaucluse
was a novelist, political satirist, and poet. Julia Gasper’s book Anne-Marie
Fauques de Vaucluse, a Tiger among the bluestockings unravels the confusion
surrounding the identity of this remarkable woman. As well as being a
biography, the author also explores Fauques works in depth, by analysing the
plots and characters in her writings, it tells us about Fauques life and the
political situation at the time. I really liked this element of the book, I
have not had the pleasure of reading any of Fauques work, but I may do so now!
As a teenager Fauques’ father was very ill and her mother
had to take over the running of the household and finances. By forcing her
daughters to become nuns, there would be no dowries to pay, and they would also
have to renounce their claim to the family property, leaving all the money, income,
and properties to their greedy mother! Fauques detested life as a nun and she
had to wait many years before she could apply for her release.
Anne-Marie was a risk taker. She wrote a book denouncing the
tyranny of Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour, which became a bestseller. To
avoid being sent to the Bastille, Fauques fled to England. In total she wrote
twenty books in French and English. She had many disastrous love affairs, and
she went to prison for debt. Fauques was also an animal rights advocate, in a
time where most people didn’t care. And she had an extraordinary ability to
counterfeit people’s handwriting!
Fauques married later in life when she was sixty. She
married for love and although the odds were stacked against the couple, and
people gossiped about her husband being much younger than her, the two had a
happy marriage, although they were heavily in debt for much of it. Her husband
was distraught when she died.
What a fascinating woman Anne-Marie Fauques de Vaucluse was!
I don’t recall reading about her before, and if I did, I sadly didn’t retain
the information. She was what we would now call a feminist. Eccentric,
brilliant and unpredictable, she is the sort of historical figure that should
have a movie or TV series made about her life! Gasper’s biography is the only
one I have seen about Fauques, and I commend them for their research, as many
of Anne-Marie’s writings were published anonymously, under different names or
with vague hints that she could be the author. There seems to be a lot of confusion and mis-information about her, so I think Gasper did a fantastic job.
This book was a real joy to read, I highly recommend it!
You can buy your copy: here
Julia Gasper's twitter: @Castafi0re
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