Gilderdale, Betty. The Seven Lives of Lady Barker. Canterbury University Press.
248
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Ethel Wilson | EW
related a personal experience that prompted her to write this story: an image of a mother, father, and small daughter in Stanley Park, Vancouver. She said the family presented an image of health... |
Textual Production | E. M. Delafield | |
Textual Production | Margaret Oliphant | |
Textual Production | May Laffan | She was furious at being identified, as she intensely disliked publicity. In an angry letter to George Grove
, editor of the magazine, she wrote: I thought I had clearly made it understood to the... |
Residence | Ouida | Ouida
and her maid were then reputedly placed in a dogcart and sent eighteen miles in the middle of the night from Sant'Alessio to Viareggio, where Ouida collapsed in the Hotel de Russie
... |
Residence | Muriel Spark | After leaving the Poetry Society, MS
moved to a lodging-house at 1 Vicarage Gate, off Church Street, Kensington, where she lived from 1949 to 1950. In the summer of 1950 she moved again... |
Reception | Elizabeth von Arnim | |
Reception | Emily Lawless | Many of EL
's papers survive, although they are scattered. The largest collection is at Marsh's Library
in Dublin. Collections of her correspondence survive in the Bodleian Library
, Oxford, the Hove Central Library |
Reception | Mary Louisa Molesworth | Mary Anne Barker
, sailing from England to join her husband
in Mauritius in early 1878, took a copy of The Cuckoo Clock which she had specially requested from her publisher, Macmillan
. Gilderdale, Betty. The Seven Lives of Lady Barker. Canterbury University Press. 248 |
Reception | Barbara Pym | Larkin argued that Pym give[s] an unrivalled picture of a small section of middle-class post-war England. “Reputations Revisited”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 3906, pp. 66-7. 66 |
Reception | Frances Burney | FB
never disappeared from literary consciousness to the same extent as many of her female contemporaries, but she was usually treated with condescension. Austin Dobson
published a life of her in 1903 in Macmillan
's... |
Reception | Rosa Nouchette Carey | The British Library
holds RNC
's correspondence with two of her publishers, Bentley
and Macmillan
, while Columbia University
, New York, holds her correspondence with Hodder and Stoughton
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. “Hodder and Stoughton Records 1875-1914”. Columbia University in the City of New York, Rare Book & Manuscript Library. |
Reception | Amy Levy | |
Reception | Marie Belloc Lowndes | |
Reception | Sophia Jex-Blake |
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