![]() ![]() Chung, focuses on the body of the work, not just The Dollmaker. Additionally, the 1995 collection, Harriette Simpson Arnow: Critical Essays on Her Work, edited by Haeja K. Michigan State University Press aided substantially in this shift by bringing out an edition of the previously unpublished novel Between the Flowers in 1999, as well as a new edition of Hunter's Horn (first published in 1949) two years earlier. Fortunately, certain developments during the last two decades suggest a movement away from the perception of Arnow as a "one novel" author. The Dollmaker, however, hardly represents the sum total of Arnow's achievement, for she wrote six novels, two social histories, one autobiographical memoir, and numerous short stories, book reviews, and critical articles in a career that spanned six decades. ![]() ![]() Twenty-five years after her death in March of 1986, Harriette Simpson Arnow remains most widely known for her 1954 masterpiece, The Dollmaker: Only this Arnow novel has consistently appeared in print, and most Arnow criticism centers on the one work. ![]()
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