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THE GILDED EDGE by Catherine Prendergast

THE GILDED EDGE

Two Audacious Women and the Cyanide Love Triangle That Shook America

by Catherine Prendergast

Pub Date: Oct. 5th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-18292-5
Publisher: Dutton

An examination of the issues surrounding an apparent love triangle that ended in death.

In this work of narrative nonfiction, Prendergast, a Guggenheim fellow and English professor at the University of Illinois, investigates the circumstances surrounding the Gilded Age suicides of Nora May French, George Sterling, and Carrie Sterling by cyanide ingestion. All three individuals were members of a bohemian writing colony located at Carmel-by-the-Sea on the Monterey Peninsula in California. With diligent research, captivating detail, and a little creative license to fill in the gaps, Prendergast chronicles the events that led to the intersection of these three lives. The author also explores the myth and illusion associated with the creation of the writing colony, which would “become famous for hosting Jack London, Upton Sinclair, and Sinclair Lewis.” The text reads like a dramatic novel fueled by sex, alcohol, and quests for fame and fortune. The region was experiencing a time of expansion and recovery, with the rise of the women’s suffrage movement and the upheaval following the catastrophic 1906 earthquake in San Francisco. As one personal disappointment seemed to follow another, these individuals resolved themselves to their fates. Regarding the mythology surrounding the writing colony, Prendergast writes, “the photo of London, Sterling, Austin, and Hopper in front of the beach house is simply the shot on which the Carmel myth is made, reprinted often in books about Carmel’s founding and turn-of-the-century Bohemian California….It really does seem as if these writers are engaged in spontaneous conversation.” Periodically, the author interjects herself into the story to provide insight regarding the results of her research, particularly in situations in which evidence was difficult to find or had seemingly been destroyed by men attempting to preserve their reputations.

A well-rendered, tragic tale that speaks to the struggles of women trying to find their places in society.