Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press.
2: 448-9
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Publishing | Elizabeth B. Lester | Longman
had expressed on the first of this month their willingness to publish this work on the same terms as the former. Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press. 2: 448-9 |
Publishing | Germaine de Staël | GS
left two unfinished works at her death which were published posthumously. Considérations sur les principaux événemens de la révolution françoise, 1817, appeared in English as Considerations on the Principal Events of the French... |
Publishing | Amelia Opie | |
Publishing | Elizabeth Helme | Editions appeared at Philadelphia in 1799 and New York in 1804 and 1814. In London Longman and Newbery
put out an edition in 1800; in a later edition than this appeared a frontispiece engraved from... |
Publishing | Jane Porter | |
Publishing | Mary Robinson | This marks her abandonment of a series of other unsatisfactory publishers for the firm of Hookham
. Thomas Hookham
(who concentrated on fashionable bookselling but also published a few books a year) issued five of... |
Publishing | Elizabeth B. Lester | Longman
's reader (our literary friend Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press. 2: 449 Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press. 2: 449 |
Publishing | Amelia Opie | AO
finished her careful revisions to The Father and Daughter and Adeline Mowbray for re-issue in the new edition printed in 1844 by W. Grove and Sons
for Longman
. Opie, Amelia. “Introduction”. Adeline Mowbray, edited by Shelley King and John B. Pierce, Oxford University Press, p. i - xxix. xxxiv, xxxix |
Publishing | Jane Porter | The publisher, Longman
, had advertised this work as in the press in a flyer printed in April 1814 (bound into a copy of Modern Times by Eliza Parsons
, 1814). Within a couple of... |
Reception | Sylvia Pankhurst | On first publication the book did very badly in the USA: during May and June 1931 only seventeen copies sold there, although reviews and a broadcast by Bernard Shaw
had reached many thousands of people... |
Reception | Catherine Fanshawe | CF
's immediately posthumous reputation rested, like her writings themselves, on oral tradition. She had the admiration of William Cowper
and Walter Scott
, as well as Joanna Baillie
, Anne Grant
, and Mary Berry |
Reception | Barbara Hofland | Longman
sold off some of their BH
copyrights to A. K. Newman
. Butts, Dennis. Mistress of our Tears, A Literary and Bibliographical Study of Barbara Hofland. Scolar Press. 40 |
Reception | Agnes Strickland | At Colburn
's death in 1856 the copyright of the illustrated edition (for which the authors had received two thousand pounds) was sold at auction to Longman, Hurst and Blackett
for £6,900. Pope-Hennessy, Una. Agnes Strickland: Biographer of the Queens of England. Chatto and Windus. 239 |
Textual Features | Anna Letitia Barbauld | The series has a general introduction, On the Origin and Progress of Novel-Writing, and a Preface, Biographical and Critical for each novelist, which in its echo of the full and original title of Johnson's... |
Textual Features | Isabella Beeton | As it turned out, however, most of the recipes and information in the book came from published sources, though two popular cookery books directed at the middle classes, Hannah Glasse
's The Art of Cookery... |
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