Lucy Gayheart

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LanguageEnglish
Publication date
1935
Lucy Gayheart
First edition
AuthorWilla Cather
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf
Publication date
1935
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)

Lucy Gayheart is Willa Cather's eleventh novel. It was published in 1935.[1] The novel revolves round the eponymous character, Lucy Gayheart, a young girl from the fictional town of Haverford, Nebraska, located near the Platte River.

Some sources indicate that Cather began writing Lucy Gayheart in 1933.[2][3] Scholar Melissa Homestead argues instead that she truly began writing in the summer of 1932.[4] Some sources agree with her.[5][6] Others are imprecise or ambiguous.[7][8] It appears that Cather began speaking about the story Blue Eyes on the Platte, her initial and intended name for Lucy Gayheart,[9][10] as early as the 1890s (using the name Gayhardt instead of Gayheart, based on a woman she met at a party),[11] and may have begun writing as early as 1926.[12][13][14] While she intended to name the novel Blue Eyes on the Platte early on, she changed the title[15] and made Lucy's eyes brown.[16] However, scholar Janis P. Stout suggests mention of Blue Eyes on the Platte may have been facetious, only beginning to write and think about Lucy Gayheart in 1933.[12] This is contradicted by Cather's lifelong partner and editor, Edith Lewis, insisting that not only did she begin working on Blue Eyes on the Platte "several years before" 1933, but that it was the precursor to Lucy Gayheart.[17] Regardless of which of these details are true, it is known that Cather reused images from her 1911 short story, "The Joy of Nelly Deane", in Lucy Gayheart.[18][19] "The Joy of Nelly Deane" may be best understood as an earlier version of Lucy Gayheart altogether.[20]

Plot summary

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