In a career that lasted little more than a decade, Kate Chopin became
well-known for stories set in the Creole and Acadian regions of
Louisiana, but her masterwork, The Awakening (1899), told the daring
story of a woman who defied social and sexual conventions, eliciting
negative reviews that denied Chopin prominence until the middle of the
twentieth century. Kate Chopin: A Literary Life sets the author in the
context of nineteenth-century American women writers to show how
standards of literary propriety affected the career of a major American
writer.