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"The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson" - W. W. Norton
The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson is a bestselling 2010 historical novel by Jerome Charyn that chronicles the inner life of Emily Dickinson. On May 1, 2011, The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson was named a "Must-Read" book by the Massachusetts Center for the Book and selected as finalist for the Center's fiction book award in the fiction category.

Rocky Mountain News and Entertainment Weekly have listed The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson as one of Charyn's best books, and Charyn himself said. "I wanted not to steal Emily’s own miraculous thunder but to learn from her, and to render her own voice as I imagined it, to reinvent Emily Dickinson within the limits of whatever thunder I had."

The publication of this novel stirred a great deal of controversy. Some critics felt that Charyn was much too brazen in writing in Emily Dickinson’s voice and surrounding her with invented characters. The New York Times said this “fits neatly into the flourishing genre of literary body-snatching.” In the San Francisco Chronicle, the novel was called a “bodice-ripper.”

Other critics saw the work as a magical tour de force. Joyce Carol Oates, writing in The New York Review of Books, said: “Of literary sleights of hand none is more exhilarating for the writer, as none is likely to be riskier, than the appropriation of another—classic—writer’s voice.” In the Globe and Mail, reviewer William Kowalski wrote: “I had hoped that there was someone like Dickinson out there. My one regret, after finding her, was that I would never get to make her acquaintance. No doubt millions of others feel the same. It’s for us that Jerome Charyn has written this book.”

In The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, Charyn attempts to bring America’s greatest female poet to life by transforming himself into Emily Dickinson. Assuming her voice, he narrates Dickinson’s “secret life” to the reader, delving into her childhood, romantic involvements, even her final illness and death.

Charyn says he drew inspiration for his novel from Emily Dickinson’s letters and poems. He says of Dickinson: “I am fascinated by her writing and the kind of power she had. Where it came from, I don't think we'll ever know.”