Long out of print, and brought back to fill the new demand for it, Frieda Lawrence's own story places in perspective the works of the man now regarded as the greatest English novelist of the twentieth century. When Lawrence's reputation was at its lowest, in the 1930s, various memoirs by those who had known him flourished, to the detriment of his own work, for potential readers saw him in the light of a fallen prophet. In the midst of...