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The Foolish Virgin: A Romance of Today

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Authors
  
Thomas Dixon, Jr.

Publication date
  
1915

Originally published
  
1915

Page count
  
352

Language
  
English

Pages
  
352

Author
  
Thomas Dixon Jr.

The Foolish Virgin: A Romance of Today t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRolmAkSp5WEiSo

Publisher
  
D. Appleton and company

Similar
  
The One Woman: A Story of M, The Leopard's Spots, TRAITOR A STORY OF THE FAL, The Life Worth Living: A, The Clansman (Volume

The Foolish Virgin: A Romance of Today is a 1915 novel by Thomas Dixon, Jr..

Contents

Plot summary

Mary Adams, a schoolteacher in New York City, dreams of finding a husband. She starts a relationship with Jim Anthony, a criminal she meets at the New York Public Library.

Mary and Jim visit North Carolina to meet Anthony's mother. Now a drunk, she tries to murder her son in order to retrieve the valuables from his suitcase that he has stolen. Mary escapes when she finds out about Anthony's criminal activities, and she is rescued by a physician. She is pregnant with Jim's son. Later, he returns his stolen items, builds a family home for his wife and son, and promises to get a job and provide for his family.

Main theme

The novel is a criticism of the emancipation of women.

Critical reception

In a January 1916 review for Bookman, critic P.G. Hulbert, Jr. argued that the ending of the novel was absurd.

Biographer Anthony Slide has suggested that there is 'a vague hint of eugenics' when Mary is worried that her son may inherit Jim's criminal propensions. He added, 'It is not Jim who is the hero here, or even the friendly doctor, but rather the South. The South has a regenerative effect on Jim and helps cure him of the ills—that is, crime—that he developed in New York.'

Cinematic adaptations

The film rights were purchased by the Clara Kimball Young Film Corporation, headed by actress Clara Kimball Young and Lewis J. Selznick. Filming began in August 1916. The film received good reviews in the Motion Picture News, the Exhibitor's Trade Review and the Evening Express.

Another cinematic adaptation was released in 1924. Directed by George W. Hill, it starred Elaine Hammerstein and Robert Frazer. The storyline was strayed from the novel, and the film received bad reviews in Variety and Photoplay.

References

The Foolish Virgin: A Romance of Today Wikipedia


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