Delicious Sponge Cake 
Dinah Birch
- Stories by Elizabeth Stoddard, edited by Susanne Opfermann and Yvonne Roth
‘No one knows what a literary ambition I had, nor how my failure has broken me,’ Elizabeth Stoddard wrote in 1876. She was 53, and knew she was not going to be numbered among the great American writers of her generation. The gloomy and self-dramatising tone is characteristic. In fact she was exceptionally robust, and nothing could break her. She went on writing for years, and lived to see a flurry of interest in her work before she died in 1902. But she never earned the public recognition she wanted.
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Dinah Birch is the author of Our Victorian Education. She teaches at Liverpool University and is the general editor of the new edition of the Oxford Companion to English Literature.
Other articles by this contributor:
Wintry Lessons · Anita Brookner
Land of Pure Delight · Anglicising the Holy Land
Fear among the Teacups · Ellen Wood