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  2. The French Lieutenant's Woman is a 1969 postmodern historical fiction novel by John Fowles. The plot explores the fraught relationship of gentleman and amateur naturalist Charles Smithson and Sarah Woodruff, the former governess and independent woman with whom he falls in love.

  3. Ourika tells the life of a black slave brought up by an aristocratic French family. John Fowles translated the novel from the French in 1977, and describes it as ‘a minor masterpiece’. The literary connection, part of the inspiration for the novel, is difficult to see but important.

  4. Sep 9, 2024 · There Charles Smithson and his intended bride, Ernestina Freeman, see the French lieutenant’s woman, Sarah Woodruff, staring longingly out to sea, evidently trying to find something more than...

  5. Nov 13, 2021 · John Fowles moved to Lyme Regis in 1965, buying Underhill Farm, in the Undercliff west of Lyme. He started The French Lieutenants Woman the following year, setting it in the town a hundred years earlier (1867).

  6. His latest novel, The French Lieutenant’s Woman, brought readers an ingenious twin portrait of the seaside town of Lyme Regis, on the Devon–Dorset border, until then most closely associated in the literary mind with Jane Austen.

  7. The narrator opens the The French Lieutenant’s Woman with background information on Lyme Regis, where the story is initially set. He then introduces Charles Smithson, a thirty-two-year-old ...

  8. Aug 12, 2015 · This is the simple key to the heart of the mystery of “the French Lieutenant’s Woman,” or “poor Tragedy,” as the Lyme Regis locals call her.