Wentworth, Patricia. Ladies’ Bane. Lippincott, 1952.
title-page
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Publishing | Muriel Spark | That same year it was published in the USA by Knopf
(to whom MS
had moved from Lippincott
), and it also appeared in a condensed version in the Saturday Evening Post. It was... |
Publishing | Patricia Wentworth | PW
's Miss Silver mystery Ladies' Bane was published by J. B. Lippincott
at Philadelphia and New York two years before its appearance in London. Wentworth, Patricia. Ladies’ Bane. Lippincott, 1952. title-page British Library Catalogue. |
Publishing | Lady Cynthia Asquith | LCA
produced lives of two members of the royal family. The Duchess of York (about the woman later much loved as Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother) appeared in spring 1928, and God Save the King... |
Publishing | Nina Bawden | |
Publishing | Dorothy Brett | On 2 March 1930, when Lawrence
died in France, Brett was in New York City mourning her father's death little more than a month earlier and hoping to receive more positive news of Lawrence's condition... |
Publishing | Ella Hepworth Dixon | It had already been serialized in the Lady's Pictorial from 23 January to 30 April this year. Fehlbaum, Valerie. Ella Hepworth Dixon: the Story of a Modern Woman. Ashgate, 2005. 89 |
Publishing | Beatrice Harraden | BH
collaborated with William A. Edwards
in publishing with Lippincott
of PhiladelphiaTwo Health-Seekers in Southern California, an advice or how-to book on running a small commercial orchard as an occupation for an invalid... |
Publishing | Zora Neale Hurston | For this work she changed her publisher from Lippincott
to Scribner's
. A reprint of 1991 has an introduction by Hazel V. Carby
. Library of Congress Online Catalog. |
Publishing | May Laffan | The original London edition (in three volumes) says that she had the help of J. E. C. Bodley
in this project. Solo: Search Oxford University Libraries Online. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray, Brian Harrison, and Lawrence Goldman, editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. under John Edward Courtenay Bodley |
Publishing | Caroline Norton | Serialization of CN
's novel Old Sir Douglas began in Macmillan's Magazine; it was issued in volumes by Tauchnitz
in Leipzig and Lippincott
in Philadelphia in 1867 as well as by two different London publishers. Chedzoy, Alan. A Scandalous Woman: The Story of Caroline Norton. Allison and Busby, 1995. 282 |
Publishing | Tillie Olsen | The stories were I Stand Here Ironing, Hey Sailor, What Ship?, O Yes, and the title story. Lippincott
, who first published the volume, lost money on it. It was published in... |
Reception | Muriel Spark | Spark's editor, Alan Maclean
, told her: You've hit the jackpot today. Spark, Muriel. Curriculum Vitae: Autobiography. Constable, 1992. 213 |
Textual Production | Rebecca Harding Davis | RHD
published the legal novel A Law Unto Herself with Lippincott
of Philadelphia. Rose, Jane Atteridge. Rebecca Harding Davis. Twayne Publishers, 1993. xvii |
Textual Production | Muriel Spark | This came at a time when she was submitting her work (almost entirely poetry) in large quantity and having it rejected. She submitted this story as Aquarius: real names were not revealed until the... |
No timeline events available.