There are a lot of \u27firsts\u27 in the few months between September 1856 when Marian Evans Lewes began \u27The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton\u27 and February 1857 when she adopted George Eliot as a pseudonym. The Bartons were the first of her many families. The words of the title were, according to her own recollection, the first words of her new career. She was at the time in the process of making a new, it could be argued, a \u27first family\u27, in the new life she was sharing with George Henry Lewes and his young sons. And George Eliot, himself or herself, made a first appearance, born of the new Evans-Lewes family and already the bearer of the Bartons. The creation of \u27George Eliot\u27 is the most important of a series ...