Clarke, John Stock. Ella D’Arcy.
Garland Publishing
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Anthologization | Sarah, Lady Pennington | An Unfortunate Mother's Advice to her Absent Daughters quickly became a staple of composite volumes directed toward young women's conduct. At Edinburgh a volume of this kind, Instructions for a Young Lady, in every sphere... |
Literary responses | Juliana Horatia Ewing | She was reciprocally admired by Ruskin
in the nineteenth century, and admired also by Kipling
in the twentieth. Critic Mary Lascelles
lamented at the centenary of JHE
's death that her books had been allowed... |
Publishing | Ella D'Arcy | Monochromes appeared in Lane's series Keynotes, echoing the similar titles of George Egerton
, whose own first collection of stories opened the series and supplied its name. |
Publishing | Ella D'Arcy | A Garland
reprint appeared in 1984. |
Publishing | Edna Lyall | She was introduced to the publishers of this novel, Hurst and Blackett
, through the good offices of the writer George Macdonald
. Escreet, J. M. The Life of Edna Lyall. Longmans, Green and Co., 1904. 45 |
Publishing | Juliana Horatia Ewing | Some of the later stories were written at Fredericton, New Brunswick, including Reka Dom and River House. Gatty, Horatia K. F. “Juliana Horatia Ewing and Her Books, 1885”. A Celebration of Women Writers, edited by Mary Mark Ockerbloom. 21 |
Publishing | Elizabeth Meeke | It was advertised in late February and early March. A Garland
facsimile appeared in 1977. |
Publishing | Eliza Fenwick | In this book product placement is even further highlighted than in some of EF
's other books for children. Paul, Lissa. “Eliza Fenwick—Forgotten in Histories of Schooling”. British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (BSECS) 35th Annual Conference, Oxford. |
Publishing | Frances Reynolds | This was the year after Johnson died. In 1788 FR
tried to get back a copy of his praise of her work in order to impress a prospective publisher. Although one publisher censoriously rejected the... |
Publishing | Julia Frankau | Henry Vizetelly
, a publisher associated with progressive thinking of various kinds—he went to prison for publishing translations of Zola
—promoted this novel by emphasis on its being a picture of Jewish life. Lock, Stephen, and Julia Frankau. “Introduction”. Dr. Phillips, The Keynes Press, 1989, p. v - xii. vii |
Publishing | Charlotte Riddell | A New York edition from Harper, compressing three volumes to one, appeared the following year. A Garland
facsimile appeared in 1979 in a series on Ireland and Irish politics, with an introduction by Robert Lee Wolff |
Publishing | Georgiana Fullerton | |
Publishing | Catherine Sinclair | It sold for five shillings and six pence. Again a dedication was formally inscribed on the title page, this time to the author's niece Lady Diana Boyle
. The book's high degree of success expanded... |
Publishing | Jane Barker | The title-page (followed by Carol Shiner Wilson
's editiion) says 1715. Such post-dating, says Kathryn King
, is typical of Curll
's publishing practices. Wilson, Carol Shiner, and Jane Barker. “Introduction”. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker, Oxford University Press, 1997, p. xv - xliv. xxiv, 177n1 King, Kathryn R. Jane Barker, Exile: A Political Career 1675-1725. Clarendon Press, 2000. 150 |
Publishing | Catherine Sinclair | A Garland
reprint appeared in 1975. OCLC WorldCat. |
Timeline
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