McLeod, Deborah. The Minerva Press. University of Alberta.
467
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Publishing | Rachel Hunter | This one was shorter again: two volumes. RH
's London publisher was Longman
. A later edition by the Minerva Press
bore no date, but was advertised in 1812. McLeod, Deborah. The Minerva Press. University of Alberta. 467 |
Publishing | Anna Miller | The next year Edward and Charles Dilly
in London both re-issued the three-volume Dublin edition and published a second edition compressed into two volumes. This added marginal notes identifying places and artists, and a place... |
Publishing | Anna Maria Bennett | It is dedicated to a Colonel Hunter, who is said both to have wept over Anna and to have been helpful to AMB
's daughter. The Minerva Press
printed a second edition in 1797, and... |
Publishing | Sarah Fielding | The preface sounds condescending today, yet it offers high literary praise. Henry brushed up his sister's grammar and replaced colloquial words and expressions with more formal ones. He also altered her punctuation, notably removing her... |
Publishing | Frances Jacson | This is another novel ascribed in earlier sources to Alethea Lewis
, and available through Chawton
Novels On-line at http://www.chawtonhouse.org/?page_id=55488. Two plot-elements, indeed, are parallelled in Lewis's life: the motherless heroine, Caroline, and the long-drawn-out... |
Publishing | Amelia Opie | The fifth edition, 1808, has a frontispiece engraving of the painting by her husband
which is now at Chawton House Library
. It went through six editions of 1,000 to 1,500 copies in the years... |
Publishing | Anna Maria Bennett | |
Publishing | Frances Jacson | The Chawton House Library
copy of this novel is digitally available among their Novels On-line at http://www.chawtonhouse.org/?page_id=55488. The title-page (which quotes Cowper
) gives the date of 1823. Again, the generally-made attribution to Alethea Lewis |
Publishing | Marie-Madeleine de Lafayette | This book, set in the period which in England was Elizabethan
, became notorious before publication through private salon readings. When published in Paris by Barbin
, with the author's name withheld, it was immediately... |
Publishing | Sarah Scudgell Wilkinson | This novel is now available from Chawton House Library
's Novels on Line from http://www.chawtonhouse.org/?page_id=55488. |
Publishing | Elizabeth Griffith | EG
's version of Marie-Madeleine de Lafayette
's The Princess of Cleves. An Historical Novel is available in the Chawton House Library
Novels On-line series at http://www.chawtonhouse.org/?page_id=55488. Her version of Aphra Behn
's Oroonoko,... |
Publishing | Harriette Wilson | |
Publishing | Jane Harvey | JH
dated her preface 12 February 1806. A former owner of what is now the Bodleian Library
copy, who lived at Tynemouth Vicarage, wrote their name in the novel in 1936. The Chawton House Library |
Publishing | Alethea Lewis | The subscribers included George Crabbe
and his wife
, and Mary Meeke
(who was for years, but erroneously, thought to have been a novelist herself). OCLC WorldCat (in 2015) lists three copies (at Yale
... |
Publishing | Harriette Wilson | She said she wrote it in eight days. Wilson, Frances. The Courtesan’s Revenge. Faber. 238 |
No timeline events available.
No bibliographical results available.