The Bacillus of Beauty
By Harriet Stark and Joe Monson
()
About this ebook
Helen Winship moved to New York to pursue her studies in biology. John Burke, her fiancé, arrives in the Big Apple to find she has transformed into the most beautiful woman in the world, thanks to an experimental microbial treatment given to her by her professor.
The treatment is successful beyond everyone's wildest dreams, cat
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The Bacillus of Beauty - Harriet Stark
THE BACILLUS OF BEAUTY
Special Edition
HARRIET STARK
Edited by
JOE MONSON
Hemelein PublicationsContents
Legacy of the Corridor
Patient Zero, SE
Joe Monson
No Truth in Beauty?: Harriet Stark and the Bacillus of Beauty
Lee Allred
Book I: The Broken Chrysalis
1. The Metamorphosis
2. The Most Beautiful Woman in the World
3. The Hornets’ Nest
4. The Goddess and the Mob
5. A High Class Concert
Book II: The Birth of the Butterfly
1. The Psychological Moment
2. A Sunday School Lesson
3. The Quest of Knowledge
4. Girl, Bachelor, and Biologist
5. The Finding of the Bacillus
6. The Great Change
7. The Coming of the Lover
Book III: The Joy of the Sunshine
1. Christmas
2. A Looking Over by the Pack
3. Snarling at the Council Rock
4. In the Interests of Music
5. A Plague of Reporters
6. Love Is Nothing!
7. Love Is All!
8. A Little Belted Earl
Book IV: The Bruising of the Wings
1. The Kiss That Lied
2. The Irony of Life
3. The Suddenness of Death
4. Some Remarks about Cats
5. The Love of Lord Strathay
6. Little Brown Partridges
7. Letters and Science
8. A Chaperon on a Cattle Train
9. A Burst of Sunlight
10. Plighted Troth
Book V: The End of the Beginning
1. The Deeds of the Farm
2. Cadge’s Assignment
3. P.P.C.
A Request
About the Author
About the Essayist
About the Illustrator
About the Cover Artist
About the Editor
Legacy of the Corridor
Also from Hemelein Publications
Legacy of the Corridor
Way back in 1994, M. Shayne Bell put together Washed by a Wave of Wind, an anthology of short works by authors from the Corridor
, an area that covers Utah, most of Idaho, parts of Wyoming and Nevada, and stretches into Arizona and parts of northern Mexico. Sometimes, the area around Cardston, Alberta, Canada, is included, too. For those unfamiliar with this area, it was settled by Mormon pioneers, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Shayne’s anthology highlighted science fiction and fantasy works by authors from the area, as the Corridor contained an unusually high number of successful authors—for the population in the area—both genre and non-genre, both members and non-members of the predominant religion. That legacy continues today with an impressive list of authors such as:
Jennifer Adams · D. J. Butler
Orson Scott Card · Michael R. Collings
Michaelbrent Collings · Ally Condie
Larry Correia · Kristyn Crow
James Dashner · Brian Lee Durfee
Sarah M. Eden · Richard Paul Evans
David Farland · Diana Gabaldon
Jessica Day George · Shannon Hale
Mettie Ivie Harrison · Tracy Hickman
Laura Hickman · Charlie N. Holmberg
Christopher Husberg · Raymond F. Jones
Matthew J. Kirby · Gama Ray Martinez
Brian McClellan · Stephenie Meyer
L. E. Modesitt, Jr. · Brandon Mull
Jennifer A. Nielsen · Wendy Nikel
James A. Owen · Ken Rand
Brandon Sanderson · Caitlin Sangster
J. Scott Savage · D. William Shunn
Jess Smart Smiley · Eric James Stone
May Swenson · Howard Tayler
Brad R. Torgersen · Nym Wales
Dan Wells · Robison Wells
David J. West · Carol Lynch Williams
Dan Willis · Julie Wright
That’s a big list of names, and it only barely scratches the surface. Hemelein Publications created this publication series to highlight authors from the Corridor, both well-known and lesser-known. We think Shayne did a wonderful job drawing attention to these amazing writers back then, and we want to continue what he started.
You can learn more about the series at:
http://hemelein.com/go/legacy-of-the-corridor/
Joe Monson
Managing Editor
Hemelein Publications
Patient Zero, SE
Joe Monson
One of the things I did when starting the Legacy of the Corridor series was to look up information on speculative fiction authors from the area. Sure, I knew a lot of them, but it’s always good to see if there are people I might have overlooked. I found plenty of well-known authors from the area, and I found more and more lesser-known authors as I dug into things. That’s when I found Harriet Stark.
I had never heard of her before. I had never heard of her story, The Bacillus of Beauty, either. As far as I have found, it’s the only story she ever had published. Did you know that Stark claims to have formulated her idea for this story after visiting a professor at Wesleyan University who was using bacteria to create a richer, creamier butter? I found an article that discussed this in detail (though, as Lee points out in the essay following this foreword, the story may or may not actually be true).
She described how, after her meetings with the professor, she took a train where she noticed how several bright-eyed and happily chatting women made the entire car feel lighter and more cheerful. She spent the rest of the train ride thinking about how to write a story about the bacillus of beauty
. ¹
Several well-known magazines and periodicals of the time reviewed the book. Seymour Eaton, writing for The Booklovers Library, compared it favorably with The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, saying it was a story of modern, present-day society.
² Harper’s Bazar said the story is clever, and will interest the reader
. ³
It was even reviewed in Life magazine! They hated it, saying it passes the patience of the most consistent reader of trash
. ⁴ But then I’ve never put a lot of stock in basing my opinion of works solely on reviews. In fact, after all the bad reviews I’ve seen of some of my favorite books, I figure they’re just one person’s opinion, and the reviewers may only like things wildly different from what I like (happens a lot when you like adventurous and fun science fiction and fantasy). I often like things critics dislike.
When I finally read The Bacillus of Beauty, I found the characters (especially the secondary characters) interesting and engaging, though it had a few notions about women and men that are, frankly, very outdated. There are a lot of characters expressing opinions on what women should or shouldn’t do, what’s proper, and so on. There are also opinions expressed about what men should or shouldn’t do. There are phrases and attitudes about all kinds of people that you’d not find in works published now, for better or for worse. I’ll let you decide on that one.
However, all of them line up pretty well with the overwhelming majority of opinions expressed in the various magazines, newspapers, and idle chit-chat of the day at the turn of the Twentieth Century. Those were different times, with different ideas, different ways of doing things, and definitely many different expectations of women and men. People had the same kinds of dreams, desires, and needs that we find now, but they had different acceptable ways (to society) to do and accomplish them. In fact, if you keep in mind the time period in which it was published, it was surprisingly forward-thinking.
It espoused women being as smart as men. It showed female characters who were clever and witty and not just ornaments to hang on their beaus’ arms. It showed them studying, working, and excelling at science, music, and art. The main character (well, the main main character) is not stupid or even treated as stupid by most of the characters. She’s not helpless or even dependent on the other main character—her erstwhile fiancé—to rescue her. She makes her own decisions, and has to deal with the consequences of those decisions—some good, and some less so.
Even the main character’s parents and the family and folks from her hometown were shown to have a certain sound wisdom in much of what they expressed. They weren’t treated as simple bumpkins in the story (though it’s mentioned that many people consider such people to be bumpkinish). I think Stark was way ahead of her time with this story. Harper’s Bazar even pointed out that it was basically science fiction (though they didn’t use those words). ⁵
To think that a woman farmer from Payson could have such a progressive story published by a major publisher (at the time) in New York in 1900 only goes to support the theory that there’s something about The Corridor that inspires people to take up the writing of speculative fiction. The story has an obvious message, but it also tells a compelling story wrapped in the melodramatic tones common in contemporary stories of the time, and there are definite messages beyond the obvious, too. I’ll leave those for you to find and consider.
This special edition also contains eleven illustrations by Jess Smart Smiley, done in the style of story illustrations in the early 1900s. The original didn’t have any illustrations outside of the cover art, so having these is a special treat. Jess is an excellent artist, and I’m excited to be able to use his works to enhance this edition. I think they add just a little bit extra to this forgotten work.
Lee Allred has written an excellent essay, also included in this special edition, that delves into the time period in which Bacillus was originally released. It contains fascinating insight into Stark, her life, the likely influences that were used in creating this story, and how this story was received by the publishing and reading community. As far as I know, this is the first such essay written about Stark and Bacillus. (If you know of any others, I’d be delighted to read them.)
I hope you enjoy this tale, and can look at it without judging it under today’s standards. When you seek to understand the context of the time in which it was written, you can truly come to understand how groundbreaking this story was in so many different ways.
And you’ll get a fun story to enjoy, too.
Joe Monson
Managing Editor
Hemelein Publications
1 General Gossip of Authors and Writers
. Current Literature: A Magazine of Contemporary Record, Volume 30, Number 1 (January 1901). p.61.
2 Eaton, Seymour (ed). Two Fine Books of Imaginative Humour
. The Booklovers Library (1900), pp.126-127. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
3 Books & Writers
. Harper’s Bazar, Volume 33, Number 45 (November 10, 1900), p.1787* (it’s technically page 1797 due to a few pages being numbered incorrectly). New York, New York.
4 Composite
. Life, Volume 36, Number 936 (October 18, 1900), p.326. New York, New York.
5 See note 3.
No Truth in Beauty?: Harriet Stark and the Bacillus of Beauty
Lee Allred
1
October of 1900. The nineteenth-century is rapidly slipping into the past, and observers worry and wonder if perhaps all that that century treasured is also slipping into the past.
The eyes of the world's press are turned to the Boer War still raging in South Africa where rag-tag commandos of Dutch farmers on horseback are still humiliating and bedeviling the mighty British Lion. On the other side of the world, the so-called Boxer Rebellion—another rag-tag army of peasants, this one armed with but fists and bamboo spears—has risen up against European powers dismembering a prostrate China. For fifty-five tense days, the embattled Legation Compound in Peking holds out against the Boxer siege until relief columns from the combined armies of the world's industrial powers—Britain, Germany, Russia, America, and Japan—finally arrive. Photographs of the chaotic aftermath still fill American magazines.
That interest in far-off China lay in America’s participation in the crisis. Much to its own surprise, the United Stated had only just recently emerged a World Power, having fought and won (with almost embarrassing ease) a foolishly unnecessary but splendid little war against the desiccated husk of the Spanish Empire. The ten-week-war had ended but its reverberations still echoed, particularly in the 1900 presidential election.
October marked the final turbulent throes of that election, a rematch between the staid incumbent William McKinley and the firebrand populist William Jennings Bryan. Bryan quixotically ran yet again on the issue of Free Silver. The issue may have resonated during the economic downturn back in 1896, but not 1900. Between a booming economy and his victory over Spain, McKinley's re-election was never really in doubt. McKinley won in a landslide: 292 electoral votes to 156.
Even so, the election was a bitter one. Disillusioned by what it saw as American Imperialism after American emerged from the war in possession of three overseas colonies—Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines, America saw herself no better than the European colonial powers she had previously mocked and derided.
The press, who had so vociferously egged on the war, now derided its results with equal gusto, turning on McKinley. Life Magazine offered the following guide to voters: For War, Teddy, Taxation and Trusts, vote for William McKinley. For the Constitution, Peace, Panic and Populism, vote for W.J. Bryan.
Life accompanied this with a cartoon depicting Uncle Sam, draped in imperial robes, crown, and scepter, sitting dejectedly in on throne beside Lady Liberty bewailing that darned if I can have any fun on Fourth of July with these things on.
Good Government types and reform-minded citizens had concerns closer to home. They bewailed that the GOP could raise $1 million of campaign contributions as easily as once it raised a mere $10,000 a few elections ago. Party machines and voting corruption were rampant.
Republicans might have had their squalid Pennsylvania and upper-New York State machines, but nothing on Earth could compare to the brazen, open, and total corruption of the Democrats’ Tammany Hall machine of New York City. Votes were openly, publicly manufacture red as if on a factory assembly line. Just prior to the election, Munsey’s Magazine could run an acidic sixteen-page expose complete with extensive photo spread of the inner sanctum on 14th Street and its fat cat denizens, and the Tammany crowd only laughed. Within the confines of New York City, Tammany was inviolate. For the moment.
The average citizen really didn't care much. In those halcyon days before personal income tax and three-letter agencies, government impinged very little on daily life. The business of America, one future president would say, is business. And business was good. Golden, even. Gilded.
The year 1900 marks the apex of the Gilded Age. Nothing better reflected the sheer vitality of the American economic miracle than the advertisements adorning the back pages of the magazines and newspapers of the day. The Chicago Time-Herald boasted that it had published over four-million lines of advertising copy. (New York ad agencies offered to effortlessly place your firm's latest ad on 14,000 street cars with a single stroke of your pen on their dotted line.)
Magazine advertisements hawked wares of all shapes, sizes, and budgets. From central heating furnaces to luxury yachts. Eight-dollar rollup desks, billiard tables, Pillsbury flour, Cream of Wheat, women's corsets, cures for baldness, wheelchairs for invalids, quack medicines, folding Kodak pocket cameras (prices ranged from $5 to $35, depending on model), and even mimeograph contraptions. Ads touted Sharp repeating shotguns, revolvers, and even Spanish Army rifles (Mauser 7 x 57s) captured as war booty and sold off as government surplus.
The Armour meat packing company (of later hot dog fame), who had furnished over half-a-million pounds of canned meat (much of it spoiled) for the Army during the Spanish war, admonished the general public that You Don't Know Beans
and plastered this counter-intuitive slogan on a series of stylish proto-art deco ads designed to sell their new canned pork and beans product to every American man, woman, and child (presumably even those with chicken pox). Van de Camp's, who did know beans, countered with a stylish series of art nouveau pork and bean ads of their own.
And the gadgets! Magazine back pages were rife with ads for all the latest mechanical crazes. Typewrites ads for Underwood, Densmore, Remington, and Yost brands. Ads picturing horseless carriages of all seating configurations and models. Familiar, household brands like Riker, Columbia, and Locomobile automobiles (800 vehicles of the latter actually in use!).
One manufacturer, the Woods Motor company, offered a Spider
model. With 42-inch rubber-shod wooden rear wheels, 36-inch front wheels, and a driver seat perched above and behind the passenger cab, it looked for all the world like a handsome cab minus horses. The Spider boasted speeds of 12 miles an hour and could go 30 miles on one charge, assuming a motorist could find 30 miles of uninterrupted macadamed roadway.
None of these contraptions would have been possible without the relentless march of science and progress. The 19th Century had been the story of the steam engine, the locomotive, and the telegraph. In the late 1860s, the pinnacle of sailing knowledge and design dating back to before written history—sailing like the fabled Cutty Sark had, John Henry-like, gone up against new-model steamships like the SS Agamemnon and lost out on transoceanic trade routes.
The newly-dawning Twentieth Century promised even more marvels. Rudyard Kipling would soon write Transportation is Civilization
—transportation of not only people and finished goods and raw materials but the transportation of ideas and information. Telephones were already commonplace. Marconi had done Edison one better with his new wireless telegraphy. Already there was talk of the British Royal Navy fitting out its battleships with radios having an effective range of a staggering sixty miles. Perhaps even more amazing, some American newspapers were operating a machine that transmitted images over telegraph wires. Its inventor called the machine a telediagraph.
Other inventors had designed related machines like the telautograph (for sending signatures for legal verification), the Bildtelegraph, the tephane, and others. Perhaps one day Marconi would add images to his wireless communication as well.
Some observers worried this relentless march of progress came with a price. The Outlook magazine noted that after New York City replaced most of its horse drawn trolleys with new-fangled cable, electric, and steam-driven trolley cars, traffic fatalities in the past ten years rose from 155 to 235. The new and quicker method is not safer,
it bemoaned. Almost as an afterthought the article listed a single fatality caused by that new automobile contraption. This would change.
More pious publications worried less about mortality and more about immorality. They feared Darwinism, science, and atheism were de-churching people, turning them away from religion. Numerous religious censuses were taken, both in the US and Britain. A census conducted in Youngstown, Ohio by the Ministerial Association relieved some fears: in its population of 58,000, less than 6% claimed no religion affiliation. The Youngstown census wasn’t all good news, however. Her largest denomination was revealed to be not right-minded Protestants, but Roman Catholicism (11.493). There were even 590 Hebrews
lurking in town, and somewhat bizarrely, nine whole Latter-Day Saints
who seemed to lack the migratory sense needed to decamp to far-off Utah where their sort belonged. Otherwise,
Pastor Sinks concluded in the pages of the September issue of The Christian Work, the survey was a gratifying and fruitful accomplishment
Darwin hadn't quite won over God, not yet.
2
Nowhere was progress and new technologies more disruptive, however, than in the world of publishing. Doomsayers saw only the trees—that the camera had all but eliminated the illustrated travelogue book, that the typewriter meant no more languid Longfellows sending in handwritten manuscripts comprised of strips of differing scrap paper pasted together—and not the forest of real change.
Modern printing presses had brought an economy of scale to publishing and printing. Former telegraph operator Frank A. Munsey came to New York with $300 dollars in his pocket and an idea gleaned from staring all day at telegram form pads. Buying out a bankrupt publishing firm, Munsey set about implementing his idea. Instead of publishing on expensive slick
paper and charging 25¢ a copy, publish magazines on cheap newsprint and only charge a dime.
His new pulp magazines
revolutionized the magazine field and made Munsey a personal fortune (his worth at the time of his death was nearly half-a-billion dollars in today's money).
An explosion of pulp fiction magazines soon followed, establishing and codifying the fiction genres we know today: mystery, western, romance, science fiction. This same low-cost newsprint method would eventually give rise to the comic book in the 1930s, too.
Book publishers would be slower to adopt Munsey's cheaper methods (the paperback boom wouldn't occur until after World War II), but the pulp magazine boom meant more readers and more readers meant more book sales overall. Critics bewailed the increasing number of blood-and-thunder
books catering to the pulp reader crowd.
The U.S. Copyright office announced that in the prior accounting year (July 1, 1899 to June 30, 1900) they'd issued copyrights for 6550 volumes of books proper.
This was nearly a 20% increase in copyrights issued the previous period, nearly 20%. Publisher's Weekly crowed that there had been no growth approximating the phenomenal increase of demand for reading.
Five out of six of those copyrights were new books—new books by American authors—a sea change in a book field traditionally dominated by reprinted classics.
Then as now, the center of book publishing was New York City. Instead of four or five (or is it down to only three now?) huge conglomerates, dozens upon dozens of independent publishing firms flourished. One major publisher of the day was the Frederick A. Stokes Company of 5 and 7, East Sixteenth Street, New York. At the close of 1900, Publishers Weekly listed the current Stokes catalog at 42 books (18 non-fiction, 25 novels, and 9 children’s books).
Stokes' best-selling title in October, 1900 was Robert Orange by John Robert Hobbes (pen name of female author Pearl Mary Teresa Richards), the highly anticipated sequel to her A School for Saints, but the Stokes book generating the most critical buzz was future Boy Scouts founder Baden-Powell's topical account of the Boer War, Sport in War.
The Stokes firm was forward-thinking in promoting its products. They took out the usual ads in literary and book trade magazines and bombarded magazines from Life and Munsey’s to Christian Work with review copies, but Stokes also employed innovative techniques.
Stokes ran up a second printing of Harold Frederic's 1898 novel, The Market Place, but called it a special edition
instead. The only thing special
about it was the addition of nine full-page house ads for the latest Stokes books. These ads feature advertising techniques still used today: excerpts from the novel touted, reviewer quotes from around the nation, blurb quotes from the authors themselves, plot summaries, readers’ letters, and even hype about their decorative book covers.
Stokes could and did follow other publishers in capitalizing on current events like Baden-Powell’s Boer War and cranking out didactic moral
novels like Orange, but they could be forward-thinking in book acquisitions, too. Stokes aggressively sought what we’d call speculative fiction novels.
When Ainslie’s Magazine paid a staggering $1750 sight unseen for the serialization right for H.G. Wells next novel, they’d hoped for another War of the Worlds. What they got was Love and Mr. Lewisham—a tepid, run-of-the-mill romance novel. A horrified Ainslie’s declined to print it, preferring to eat the $1750 loss. The Stokes company stepped in and snapped up the rights, willing to take a financial hit in publishing Lewisham in exchange for cementing itself as Wells’s American publisher for future (and hopefully more futuristic) titles.
Autumn of 1900 also saw Stokes publishing Goops and How to Be Them by Gelett Burgess. A sort of reverse-psychology moral primer for children, Goops featured Tim Burtonesque illustrations of naughty children
with faces like moray eels. Never out of print (you can buy copies even today), Goops spawned several sequels and went on to scare the cheese-and-crackers out of generations of traumatized American kids.
October of 1900 also marked the Stokes release of another singular book. Trade ads listed it as 340 pages, 12 mo, cloth, ornate, $1.50.
(12mo is publisher shorthand for paper size: duodecimo,
a single printing press sheet divided into 12 pages approximately 4 3/4 by 7 1/2
, the standard cut-size for fiction novels of that day.)
The book cover was indeed ornate. Dark olive textured cloth gilt in gold highlights. Two abstract golden shapes suggest twin bubbling, fizzing champagne glasses. Slender fluted letters of gold spell out, Roman-style, THE BACILLVS OF BEAVTY—The Bacillus of Beauty.
Reading the publisher’s description of this strangely-titled novel, one wonders if in fact those aren’t stemmed glasses of fizzing champagne but rather laboratory retorts containing teeming golden bacteria.
A novel with a fresh and unhackneyed plot and treatment. It is like nothing else ever printed.
It tells the story of a young girl from the West who is made the subject of an experiment by a Professor in Barnard College, which transforms her into the most beautiful woman in the world.
Beauty proves a key to the smart world, and for a time the houses of the rich are as familiar to her as the studios and dens
of newspaper girl bachelors
and art students had been. Both phases of life are treated with the sure touch that knowledge gives.
That last phrase intimates that author Harriet Star is equally at home with Manhattan’s glittering high society, it’s so-called 400,
as well as the up-to-the-latest scientific laboratories. That she is intimately familiar with the scope of her novel—the pressrooms of Gotham’s newspapers, the smoke-filled backrooms of Tammany Hall, and the ballrooms of high society. That she lives in a world of belted earls and European nobility, nights at the opera, and silver salvers bearing calling cards with corners turned back just so and scrawled with Visete or Felicitations or Pour Prendre Congé.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The author, Harriet Stark, was a church-going farmwife of Mormon pioneer stock and mother of six (later eleven) living in the town she was born in and would die in: the tiny rural hamlet of Payson, Utah.
3
Stark was Harriet Hattie
Wride’s maiden name. Her father, Daniel Stark, was a Mormon pioneer of note. A convert from Nova Scotia, Daniel Stark as one of the California Saints
sailed around the Horn in the SS Brooklyn rather than trek across the plains. He participated in the disastrous Muddy Mission,
an ill-fated attempt to settle southwestern Utah. He surveyed the foundation for the St. George Temple. Eventually he settled in Payson, Utah where he was employed as a County Surveyor.
Daniel Stark married three plural wives. Harriet's mother was Priscilla Birkenhead Stark, a British convert, Daniel’s third (and youngest) wife and an exceptional beauty. Priscilla bore Daniel six children (Harriet was the oldest). Daniel fathered fourteen other children from his other marriages.
Harriet’s husband, Lewis William Barry Wride, was slight in height and build, almost impish. Of Welsh stock, he had a full head of reddish sandy hair and sported a lifelong mustache, grown to cover up a scar on his upper lip. By all accounts, he was as decent a man as ever lived. He ran a mixed-use family farm so typical of rural Utah: alfalfa, sugar beets, potatoes, onions, and other staples. The farm also had fruit orchards and a small dairy herd. Harriet loved him deeply.
Of Harriet herself, were it not for a one-page biographical sketch written by her youngest daughter Gwen and an unpublished, unfinished autobiography by Harriet herself, we would know little of Harriet Stark aside from vital statistics gleaned from stone headstones and yellowed newsprint obituaries: born September 23, 1866, Payson, Utah; married to Lewis Wrede, March 18, 1886, Logan, Utah; died, August 23, 1944 from causes incident to old age,
Payson, Utah.
Harriet’s autobiography essentially covers only her childhood, breaking off at her marriage. Daughter Gwen Wride Fillmore—born eight years after publication of Bacillus—reminisces only about her own years growing up in the Wride household. Neither document mentions Wride’s writing career.
They do, however, paint a hard life: raising eleven kids in a farmhouse without running water and constantly short on money (Lewis Wrede had many virtues, but ambition—a drive to improve his farm—didn’t appear to be one of them). One November, the barn containing a whole year's harvest burned down (ironically, on Guy Fawkes Day). Harriet had to sew all her children’s clothes, making her own patterns taken from photographs in magazines. She never owned a house with central heating, never owned an automobile, Spyder
or any other model. Harriet spent her years caring for eleven children, then an invalid father-in-law, then an invalid husband, and finally cared for as an invalid herself, dying in the home of her youngest daughter.
In these family histories, we see a glimpse of Harriet as a cow-milking, apple-picking, hay-mowing, aproned farmwife. We get nothing at all of Harriet Stark the writer.
4
Current-day writers leave a bakery’s worth of breadcrumbs behind during their careers. Social media, professional online forums, convention panels dutifully recorded by ubiquitous smart phones and posted online—scholars of current-day writers have a wealth of material to work with, not the least of which are a writer’s papers and manuscripts now almost routinely donated to university libraries upon a writer’s death.
Researchers of Harriet Stark have none of that. Harriet Stark left nothing behind except her one published novel. We have no original manuscript, no letters to her publisher, no unfinished drafts of other projects. Nothing. Not one word in her obituaries or her family histories even mention that she wrote at all, let alone that she was the first Utah author to be published by a New York publisher.
We don’t know when Bacillus was written, how long it took to write, or how many publishers she sent it to before Stokes bought it.
What we have is one published promotional letter
purporting to tell of how Stark came up with the central premise of Bacillus:
"Three years ago I spent a day with Prof. H. W. Conn of Wesleyan University, who was applying bacillus culture methods to butter. He was educating cream by indoctrinating it with microbes of