By James Fenimore Cooper
Published by SMK Books
Copyright: © 2012
Original Publication Date: 1841


Biography:
James Fenimore Cooper died in 1851 at the age of 61 in Cooperstown, New York, a small town founded by his father, William Cooper in 1785. The city is located on the southern edge of Otsego Lake which means ‘Place of the Rock’ in the Mohawk language and Glimmerglass in his novel ‘The Deerslayer‘.
Cooper, the eleventh of twelve children, after his first birthday spent his pre-teen years in Cooperstown. He was enrolled at Yale University when he was thirteen and expelled for dangerous mischief at 16 without obtaining a degree. He crewed a merchant ship at the age of seventeen and sailed across the Atlantic to London and down along the Spanish coast into the Mediterranean. In 1808 he joined the U.S. Navy and spent the next two years serving aboard inland lake gunboats and preforming recruiting duties. He resigned his commission in the navy in 1810 for the lack of excitement. (In life where timing is everything, the British naval blockade of American trade during the war of 1812 may have provided Cooper with some needed excitement.) In 1811 he married a wealthy heiress, Susan Augusta de Lancey and settled down to life of leisure for the next decade.
In 1820, after ten years of dabbling in various occupations, more as hobbies rather than employment, he decided to take up writing, producing his first novel, a poor imitation of Jane Austin novels, ‘Precaution’ in the same year. His second novel ‘The Spy‘ was more successful and gave him a measure of fame and wealth, enough to encourage him to continue his pursuit as a novelist and writer.
His first ‘Leatherstocking’ novel. ‘The Pioneers‘ appeared in 1823 followed by the second ‘Leatherstocking’ novel, ‘The Last of the Mohicans‘ in 1826. ‘The Last of the Mohicans‘ is considered his greatest triumph as an author from the time it was written to the present day and has been adapted to film many times over the last one hundred years.
As a testament to his success as a writer, after two centuries almost all his fictional novels are still in print.
The Deerslayer:
‘The Deerslayer‘, first published in 1841, was the fifth and final volume of the ‘Leatherstocking‘ historical romantic novels by Cooper. In ‘The Deerslayer‘ the author brings the protagonist of the ‘Leatherstocking‘ series, Natty Bumppo, back from the future as a prequel to the first four novels. Running in the background to the story is the French and Indian Wars, setting the stage and providing context for the action and dialogue occurring on and around Otsego Lake known as Glimmerglass in the novel.
Natty, referred to by his nicknames Deerslayer and Hawkeye, is a young 17th century moralistic American frontiersman living and traveling among the Iroquoian Mohawks, in what is now known as central upstate New York. Deerslayer has a strong innate sense of right and wrong from a civilized Christian perspective which he continually attempts to square and bridge with the less polished cultural tenets of his Indian brothers. To avoid moral conflicts with his adopted tribal brothers he focuses on the good in the red and, with a nod to cultural sensitivity, he internally closets any interpretive bad in the red as inconsequential. Deerslayer though, takes a less compromising position with his white brethren; admonishing them for traits and behaviors that diverge from his Christian grounding in what is right.
Cooper reinforces the inherent conflicts between good and bad by creating good Indians, Mohawks, and bad Indians, Mingos. The noble, liberated savage versus the evil, fearsome savage. In the end the white and red dissipate and all that is left is the perpetual struggle between good and evil.
Layered on top of Deerslayer’s sententious inclinations is a romance played out between Natty and the beautiful daughter of his traveling companion’s friend: Judith. Judith is slowly drawn to Deerslayer’s inherent goodness while Natty remains committed to his frontiersman bachelor ways. Another gap for the Deerslayer to bridge but in this instance, fails.
Literary Criticism:
‘The Deerslayer‘ received much critical praise from the time of publication onward into the 20th century. Author D.H. Lawrence found the book “one of most beautiful and perfect books…” Critic Carl Van Doren called novel “as a whole absorbing.” Wilkie Collins, author, said “Cooper is the greatest artist in the domain of romantic fiction yet produced in America.” Critic Lounsbury proclaimed that ‘The Pathfinder‘ and ‘The Deerslayer‘ “were pure works of art.”
Not all criticism was positive. Mark Twain supposedly found it dreadful and wrote ten pages explaining his thesis in the aptly titled: ‘Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses‘. As is his want and style, Twain’s account of Cooper’s offenses was exceptionally funny though I’m less than sure if he was serious in his criticisms or if he just saw an opening to throw a few well-constructed barbs to help pay the bills and meet contractual obligations. An excerpt from the opening to ‘Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses‘:
“Cooper’s art has some defects. In one place in ‘Deerslayer‘, and in the restricted space of two-thirds of a page, Cooper has scored 114 offences against literary art out of a possible 115. It breaks a record.
There are nineteen rules governing literary art in the domain of romantic fiction–some say twenty-two. In ‘Deerslayer‘ Cooper violated eighteen of them….”
Cooper is dead. Long live Cooper.
Bibliography – Fiction:
- Precaution. Novel. 1820
- The Spy: A Tale of the Neutral Ground. Novel. 1821
- The Pioneers; or The Sources of the Susquehanna. Leatherstocking Novel. 1823
- Tales for Fifteen; or Imagination and Heart. Short Stories. 1823
- The Pilot: A Tale of the Sea. Novel. 1824
- Lionel Lincoln; or The Leaguer of Boston. Novel. 1825
- The Last of the Mohicans: A narrative of 1757. Leatherstocking Novel. 1826
- The Prairie. Leatherstocking Novel. 1827
- The Red Rover: A Tale. Novel. 1828
- The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish: A Tale. Novel. 1829
- The Water-Witch; or The Skimmer of the Seas. Novel. 1830
- The Bravo: A Tale. Novel. 1831
- The Heidenmauer; or, The Benedictines, A Legend of the Rhine. Novel. 1832
- No Steamboats. Short Story. 1832
- The Headsman: The Abbaye des Vignerons. Novel. 1833
- The Monikins. Novel. 1835
- An Execution at Sea. Short Story. 1836 (Disputed authorship)
- Homeward Bound; or The Chase: A Tale of the Sea. Novel. 1838
- Home as Found: Sequel to Homeward Bound. Novel. 1838
- The Pathfinder; or Torland Sea. Leatherstocking Novel. 1840
- Mercedes of Castile; or The Voyage to Cathay. Novel. 1840
- The Deerslayer; or The First Warpath. Leatherstocking Novel. 1841
- The Two Admirals. Novel. 1842
- The Wing-and-Wing; or Le Feu-Follet. Novel. 1842
- Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief. Novelette. 1843
- Wyandotté; or The Hutted Knoll. A Tale. Novel. 1843
- Afloat and Ashore; or The Adventures of Miles Wallingford. A Sea Tale. Novel. 1844
- Miles Wallingford: Sequel to Afloat and Ashore. Novel. 1844
- Satanstoe; or The Littlepage Manuscripts, a Tale of the Colony. Novel. 1845
- The Chainbearer; or The Littlepage Manuscripts. Novel. 1845
- The Redskins; or Indian and Injin: Being the Conclusion of the Littlepage Manuscripts. Novel. 1846
- The Crater; or Vulcan’s Peak: A Tale of the Pacific (Mark’s Reef). Novel. 1847
- 1848 Jack Tier; or The Florida Reefs a.k.a. Captain Spike; or The Islets of the Gulf. Novel. 1848
- The Oak Openings; or The Bee-Hunter. Novel. 1848
- The Sea Lions: The Lost Sealers. Novel. 1849
- The Ways of the Hour. Novel. 1850
- Upside Down; or Philosophy in Petticoats. Play. 1850
- The Lake Gun. Short Story. 1851
References and Readings:
- Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences & Is Shakespeare Dead? By Mark Twain. Benediction Classics. 2011
- James Fenimore Cooper: Cooperstown’s Literary Ghost. By Victor A. Walsh. Literary Traveler. 2012
- American Indians and White Frontier Settlers Alike Lifted Scalps for Payback and Profit. By Ron Soodalter. HistoryNet. 2017
- Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses. Uncredited. Wikipedia. No date
- James Fenimore Cooper. By George G. Dekker. Britannica. No date
- James Fenimore Cooper. Uncredited. American Literature. No date
- Iroquoian Peoples. Uncredited. Wikipedia. No date
- Otsego Lake (New York). Uncredited. Wikipedia. No date
- Studies in Classic American Literature. By D.H. Lawerence. American Literature. No date
- The Coopers of Cooperstown: On View. Uncredited. Fenimore Art Museum. No date