| Dimensions | 17 × 24 × 5 cm |
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In the original dustsheet. Purple cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.
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Robert Louis Stevenson devoted his life to his wife Fanny: he crossed continents in search of her; scandalized his family by marrying her; built a life in the Pacific with her; survived tuberculosis because of her; and was encouraged and inspired in his writing by her. An American woman eleven years his senior, she remains in her own right one of the most independent and free-spirited women of her generation. Robert Louis Stevenson was an unknown 25-year-old when he came across Fanny for the first time in the artists’ colony of Barbizon near Paris. This biography paints a portrait of the woman behind the genius who led a fascinating existence before, during and after her marriage to Stevenson. From the silver-mining towns of Nevada to the cocoa plantations of Samoa, Fanny evinced courage and determination to survive and triumph over the odds.
Frances “Fanny” Matilda Van de Grift Osbourne Stevenson (10 March 1840 – 18 February 1914) was an American magazine writer. She became a supporter and later the wife of Robert Louis Stevenson, and the mother of Isobel Osbourne, Samuel Lloyd Osbourne, and Hervey Stewart Osbourne.
Fanny Vandegrift was born in Indianapolis, the daughter of builder Jacob Vandegrift and his wife Esther Thomas Keen. She was something of a tomboy, and had dark curly hair. At the age of seventeen she married Samuel Osbourne, a lieutenant on the state governor’s staff. Their daughter Isobel (or ‘Belle’) was born the following year.
Samuel fought in the American Civil War, went with a friend sick with tuberculosis to California, and ended up in the silver mines of Nevada. Once settled there he sent for his family. Fanny and the five-year-old Isobel made the long journey via New York, the isthmus of Panama, San Francisco, and finally by wagons and stage-coach to the mining camps of the Reese River, and the town of Austin in Lander County. Life was difficult in the mining town, and there were few women around. Fanny learned to shoot a pistol and to roll her own cigarettes.
The family moved to Virginia City, Nevada, and it was whilst living here that Samuel began to be unfaithful to Fanny. In 1866 he headed off gold prospecting in the Coeur d’Alene Mountains, and Fanny and her daughter journeyed to San Francisco. There was a rumour that Sam had been killed by a grizzly bear, but he returned to the family safe, and a second child Samuel Lloyd was born in 1868. But Samuel continued philandering, and Fanny returned to Indianapolis.
The couple reconciled again in 1869, and lived in Oakland, California, where a second son, Hervey, was born. Fanny took up painting and gardening. However, Sam’s behaviour did not improve, and Fanny finally left him in 1875 and moved with her three children to Europe. They lived in Antwerp for three months, and then to allow Fanny to study art, they moved to Paris where Fanny and Isobel both enrolled in the Académie Julian. Hervey, sick with scrofulous tuberculosis, died on 5 April 1876, and was buried in a temporary grave at Père Lachaise Cemetery.
After Hervey’s death, Fanny moved to Grez-sur-Loing, where she met and befriended Robert Louis Stevenson. A 1916 recollection of her by L. Birge Harrison (published in the Centenary Magazine) recalls, “That she was a woman of intellectual attainments is proved by the fact that she was already a magazine writer of recognized ability, and that at the moment when Stevenson first came into her life she was making a living for herself and her two children with her pen.” Convinced of his talent, she encouraged and inspired him. He became deeply attached to her, but Fanny returned abruptly to California.
In 1878 Fanny cabled Stevenson that she planned to leave her husband. Stevenson announced his intention of following her, but his parents refused to pay for it, so he saved for three years to pay his own way. In 1879, despite protests from family and friends, Stevenson went to Monterey, California, where Fanny was recovering from an emotional breakdown related to indecision about whether to leave her philandering husband. Stevenson wrote many of his most ‘muscular’ essays in Monterey while awaiting Fanny’s decision.
The lady ultimately chose Stevenson, divorced Osbourne, and in May 1880 she and Stevenson were married in San Francisco. A few days later, the couple left for a honeymoon in the Napa Valley, where Stevenson produced his work Silverado Squatters. He later wrote The Amateur Emigrant in two parts about his passage to America: From the Clyde to Sandy Hook and Across the Plains. His middle-class friends were shocked by his travel with the lower classes; it was not published in full in his lifetime, and his father bought up most copies.
In August 1880, the family moved to Great Britain, where Fanny helped to patch things up between Robert and his father. Always in search of a climate conducive to Stevenson’s ailing health, the couple travelled to the Adirondacks in the US.
In 1888, Fanny Stevenson published a short story, “The Nixie ”, which William Ernest Henley recognized as based on Katharine de Mattos’s idea they had discussed the previous year. He wrote to her husband: “Why there wasn’t a double signature is what I’ve not been able to understand.” This accusation of plagiarism led to a bitter quarrel and rupture of the Stevensons with Henley and de Mattos.
In 1888, the Stevensons chartered the Casco out of San Francisco and sailed to Western Samoa. Later voyages on the Equator and Janet Nicoll with Fanny’s son Lloyd Osbourne followed. They settled in Upolu, at their home Vailima, where Stevenson died on 3 December 1894.
Return to California: After Stevenson’s death, Fanny returned to California to begin a new life in America and Europe with an adoring companion decades her junior, newsman Edward “Ned” Salisbury Field.

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