Neha Patil (Editor)

Lost Laysen

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Publication date
  
1996 (written 1916)

Pages
  
127 pp

OCLC
  
34192604

Author
  
Margaret Mitchell

Cover artist
  
Louise Fili

Genres
  
Romance novel, Novella

3.4/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Hardback)

ISBN
  
0-684-82428-0

Originally published
  
1996

Publisher
  
Charles Scribner's Sons

Country
  
United States of America

Lost Laysen t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRkZQDuGUXOfyCiHA

Similar
  
Margaret Mitchell books, Romance novels

Lost Laysen is a novella written by Margaret Mitchell in 1916, although it was not published until 1996.

Mitchell, who is best known as the author of Gone with the Wind, was believed to have only written one full book during her lifetime. However, when she was 15, she had written the manuscript to Lost Laysen—a romance set in the South Pacific. She gave the two notebooks containing the handwritten work to a suitor named Henry Love Angel, who kept the manuscript along with a number of letters Mitchell had sent him. Angel died in 1945, but Lost Laysen remained undiscovered until his son found the manuscript while preparing to donate the letters to the Road to Tara Museum.

Lost Laysen was first published in 1996 by the Scribner imprint of Simon & Schuster (ISBN 0684824280). Edited by Debra Freer, the book includes an extensive introduction telling the story of Mitchell and Angel's relationship, complete with photographs and reproductions of some of her letters.

The protagonists of the novella are presumably based on real people – heroine Courtenay Ross, although named after Mitchell's friend, has Mitchell's personality, and Billy Duncan is probably based on Henry Angel. The love triangle also foreshadows the one in Mitchell's more famous work, Gone with the Wind, where a man is in love with a woman he has no hope of winning over.

References

Lost Laysen Wikipedia