@booklet {6958, title = {"Hilda{\textquoteright}s Home: A Story of Woman{\textquoteright}s Emancipation"}, howpublished = {Lucifer, the Light Bearer}, volume = { ns 13.3 - 3rd ser. 1.48 (whole nos. 613 - 87) [except ns 13.24 - 26]}, year = {1896}, note = {

Rpt. rev. Chicago, IL: Moses Harman, 1899. Selections rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories by United States Women, 1836-1919. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler (London: Pandora Press, 1984), 194-204 with an editor\’s note on 192-93. Different selections rpt. in Daring to Dream: Utopian Fiction By United States Woman Before 1950. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler. 2nd ed. (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1995), 111-24.\ 

}, month = {June 26, 1896 {\textendash} December 1, 1897 [except November 20 - December 4, 1896]}, pages = {See Full text}, abstract = {

Eutopia of a successful communal home. Mothers are free to choose the fathers of their children. Women are taught the skills needed for motherhood. The \"Publisher\&$\#$39;s Preface\" to the book describes the author as \"a poor, hardworking, unlettered woman\" (ii).\ \ See Joan E. Passet, \“Reading \‘Hilda\’s Home\’: Gender, Print Culture, and the Dissemination of Utopian Thought in Late-Nineteenth-Century America.\”\ Libraries and Culture\ 40.3 (Summer 2005): 307-23.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Graul, Rosa} }