TY - BOOK AU - Dell,Floyd TI - An unmarried father AV - PS PY - 2026/// CY - Salt Lake City, UT PB - Project Gutenberg KW - Illegitimate children -- Fiction KW - Chicago (Ill.) -- Fiction KW - Men -- Conduct of life -- Fiction KW - Father and child -- Fiction KW - Unmarried fathers -- Fiction N1 - Release date is 2026-05-23; Sean (@parchmentglow); Originally published; New York: George H. Doran Company, 1927 N2 - "An Unmarried Father" by Floyd Dell is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Norman Overbeck, a young Midwestern lawyer whose past affair with art student Isabel Drury yields a child, thrusting him into a conflict between love, duty, and reputation as he weighs marriage, adoption, and the claims of art versus domestic life. The story probes gender roles, secrecy, and moral responsibility with a modern, conversational sharpness. The opening of the novel shows Norman in Vickley receiving a guarded letter from Dr. Martha Zerneke of a Chicago child‑adoption society, prompting fears of scandal as he’s newly engaged and under his eminent father’s eye. Seeking counsel, he and the seasoned lawyer Gilbert Rand deduce the timing points to Isabel, and they travel to Chicago. After a strained encounter with the painter Springer, Norman meets Dr. Zerneke, who confirms Isabel has had a healthy baby boy and seeks only medical records to facilitate a confidential adoption, reminding him he has no legal claim. Norman brings flowers to Isabel in the hospital; she refuses his impulsive proposal, insists her life is painting, and plans to go to Paris, asserting adoption is best for the child despite his unease. He sees the infant, hears her cool logic about motherhood, and then wanders the Art Institute wrestling with art versus life before Gilbert urges a quiet return home. Still troubled, Norman revisits Zerneke to question the adoption, contemplates a donation, and leaves haunted by anxious visions of his unknown son. (This is an automatically generated summary.) UR - https://archive.org/details/bwb_W8-AJJ-228/page/n5/mode/2up UR - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78732 ER -