"The Desired Woman" by Will N. Harben is an engrossing story approximately the headaches of love, ambition, and cultural expectancies in the early 20th century American South. The story starts offevolved within the small hamlet of Glendale, in which the protagonist, John Fairmeadow, turns into concerned in an internet of feelings and dreams. As John struggles together with his emotions for 2 girls, the cute however socially ambitious Fanny Copeland and the sort-hearted and humble Louise Merrick, the tale delves into problems of sophistication, morality, and the pursuit of private happiness. Harben skillfully creates a story that now not best depicts the complexities of romantic relationships, however additionally presents a portrait of the social requirements and ideals of the time. Set towards the backdrop of a modernizing Southern civilization, "The Desired Woman" explores the contradictions among way of life and development. Harben's storytelling is distinguished via bright characterizations and a deep understanding of human nature. The narrative unfolds with a series of twists and turns, maintaining readers involved as they see John's personal battles and the results of his decisions on people around him.
William Nathaniel Harben was an American writer who lived in the early twentieth century. He specialized in stories about the people who lived in the mountains of Northern Georgia. He was sometimes attributed as Will N. Harben or just Will Harben. Harben was born in 1858 in Dalton, Georgia, to a wealthy family. He grew up to become a trader in the same town. At the age of 30, Harben began composing stories. His father, Nathaniel Parks Harben, was a notable southern abolitionist who worked as a spy for the Union and then a scout for General Sherman. When William was a tiny child, his family was forced to flee to the north, but they finally returned to Dalton during restoration. Harben's first book, White Marie, a narrative about a white girl raised in slavery in the American South, was written in 1889. After the work was published, he relocated his family to New York City. Harben's subsequent novel, Almost Persuaded (1890), was a religious novel. The novel attracted enough notice that Queen Victoria requested a copy. Harben later wrote Mute Confessor (1892), a romantic romance, and Land of the Changing Sun (1894), a science fiction novel. Throughout the decade, he also wrote three detective novels. Harben's greatest literary triumph was Northern Georgia Sketches (1900), a collection of short stories about Georgia "hillbillies". He became a protégé and friend of William Dean Howells.