£2.49
Bayou Folk
Short-story Collection That Established Kate Chopin As one of the America's best-loved realist writers
Bayou Folk
Bayou Folk is a Chopin's classic book containing 23 masterpiece short stories that show rural life in Louisiana after the American Civil War and how former slaves, people of color, women, poor whites, and wealthy whites chafed against social restrictions.
Kate Chopin (1850–1904) is an American writer best known for her stories about the inner lives of sensitive, daring women. Her novel The Awakening and her short stories are read today in countries around the world, and she is widely recognized as one of America's essential authors.
Her short stories were well received in the 1890s and were published by some of America's most prestigious magazines: Vogue, the Atlantic Monthly, Harpers Young People, the Youths Companion, and the Century. A few stories were syndicated by the American Press Association.
Many of her stories also appeared in her two published collections, Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897), both of which received good reviews from critics across the country who praised them for their graceful descriptions of the lives of Creoles, Acadians, African-Americans, and other people in Louisiana.
Twenty-six of her stories are children's stories—those published in or intended for children's or family magazines, the Youths Companion and others. By the late 1890s, Kate Chopin was well known among American readers of magazine fiction.