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Writers with Entries
New: January 2009
Entries Enhanced
These are a tiny proportion of all the entries revised (131 in total). Run-of-the-mill additions (new editions, new scholarship,
sale prices, film versions, etc.) are not listed here.
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Rhoda Broughton,
Bessie Rayner Parkes (and others): Detail added through work on the highly sociable
Marie Belloc Lowndes.
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Mention of
Strange Music, a new novel by Black British writer Laura Fish, which juxtaposes part of the poet's life with those of two women on her
family's Jamaican estate.
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Dorothea Primrose Campbell: New information from the memoirs of the Rev. Adam Clarke, who met DPC on a preaching tour of the Shetlands and whose son's
family later, disastrously, invited her south to England.
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Harriet Corp: Coverage of her earliest book (first now firmly identified as such),
Interesting Conversations, 1805, of which her authorship has not until now been clear.
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Shelagh Delaney: Comments on getting
A Taste of Honey past the censors at the Lord Chamberlain's office, from the British Library exhibition
The Golden Generation, British Theatre 1945-1968.
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Carol Ann Duffy: One of her poems was banned from schools as allegedly an incitement to crime: Duffy retaliated with a poem about crime in
Shakespeare.
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Eliza Fenwick: Further information emerging about her later life in the USA and Canada.
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Sarah Fielding: A new attribution has been put forward.
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Anne Finch: Mention of the exciting possibility that she wrote the libretto for John Blow's
Venus and Adonis, billed as "the first English opera".
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Frances Ridley Havergal: Mention of a unique copy of a previously unknown tiny book from the 1890s, putting her verses together with biblical texts
and flower pictures for each day of the week.
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Eliza Haywood: Expansion and complication of the entry from more extended use of Patrick Spedding's exhaustive bibliography.
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P. D. James: Her latest novel has drawn a special kind of comment because of her age: eighty-eight.
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Bryony Lavery: Her stage adaptation of
Angela Carter's
The Bloody Chamber.
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Doris Lessing: Account of her Nobel Prize speech.
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L. M. Montgomery: Her grand-daughter's revelation that depression led her to suicide.
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E. Nesbit: Mention of a tiny, undated, illustrated book-cum-greeting-card published by Raphael Tuck, undated, containing a poem by
her.
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George Orwell: The annual Orwell Prize, and the posting of his second world war diaries as a blog.
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Timberlake Wertenbaker: Additions on both her extraordinary parents, and her father's death.
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