Margaret Hungerford

-
Standard Name: Hungerford, Margaret

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Education Stella Gibbons
SG learned to read fairly late, but then read voraciously. The glowing Eastern landscapes and brilliant figures
Oliver, Reggie. Out of the Woodshed: A Portrait of Stella Gibbons. Bloomsbury.
20
of Disraeli 's Alroy and Thomas Moore 's Lalla Rookh made a particular impression. She also developed...
Intertextuality and Influence Dorothy Richardson
In this book Richardson's heroine Miriam, now eighteen years old, has returned from Germany and is a resident teacher at Wordsworth House, a school in fictional Banbury Park, North London, run by the Perne...
Textual Features Frances Sarah Hoey
The novel features a sensational bigamy plot, whose protagonist, Margaret Hungerford (not the author Margaret Hungerford , who was fifteen at the time the novel was published), returns home destitute to England from Australia, and...
Textual Production May Crommelin
The collaborators included Julia Frankau , Clotilde Graves , Margaret Hungerford , Helen Mathers , Florence Marryat , Adeline Sergeant , Tasma , Frances Eleanor Trollope , Conan Doyle , and Bram Stoker . The...

Timeline

1876: John Maxwell sold Belgravia to Chatto and...

Writing climate item

1876

John Maxwell sold Belgravia to Chatto and Windus , ending Mary Elizabeth Braddon 's association with the monthly.

By 16 June 1877: Irish novelist Margaret Hungerford published...

Women writers item

By 16 June 1877

Irish novelist Margaret Hungerford published Phyllis, her first novel, which she had written several years earlier at the age of eighteen.

By 31 August 1878: The future Margaret Hungerford published...

Women writers item

By 31 August 1878

The future Margaret Hungerford published Molly Bawn (probably then and later her best-known novel), writing as Margaret Argles in the year that her first husband, Edward Argles , died.

By 11 June 1881: The future Margaret Hungerford, still at...

Women writers item

By 11 June 1881

The future Margaret Hungerford , still at this time Margaret Argles, published a novel set in Ireland, entitled Mrs Geoffrey.

1883: Margaret Hungerford, as the Author of Phyllis,...

Women writers item

1883

Margaret Hungerford , as the Author of Phyllis, published another successful novel, which was titled Rossmoyne.

By 17 February 1883: In the year she married her second husband,...

Women writers item

By 17 February 1883

In the year she married her second husband, Thomas Hungerford , Margaret Hungerford published the popularnovelPortia under her previous married name of Margaret Argles.

By 24 November 1888: Margaret Hungerford, still writing under...

Women writers item

By 24 November 1888

Margaret Hungerford , still writing under her former married name of Margaret Argles, published Under-Currents, another successful novel.

1890: Margaret Hungerford published two novels...

Women writers item

1890

Margaret Hungerford published two novels this year: A Life's Remorse under her former married name of Margaret Argles, and A Born Coquette under her new married name of Hungerford.

1892: Margaret Hungerford used her common choice...

Women writers item

1892

Margaret Hungerford used her common choice of pseudonym, The Duchess, for another successful courtshipnovel, A Conquering Heroine.

1895: Chatto and Windus published The Professor's...

Women writers item

1895

Chatto and Windus published The Professor's Experiment, a novel by Margaret Hungerford (who was near the end of her life but not yet slackening in productivity).

Texts

Mathers, Helen et al. The Fate of Fenella. Cassell, 1892.