G. B. Stern

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Standard Name: Stern, G. B.
Birth Name: Gladys Bertha Stern
Self-constructed Name: Bronwyn
Indexed Name: G. B. Stern
Pseudonym: G. B. Stern
Nickname: Peter
Nickname: Tynx
GBS , who was writing through a large stretch of the twentieth century, published over forty novels of a middle-brow character, as well as light plays, short stories, informal criticism, and haphazard autobiographical memoirs. Her high reputation has somewhat declined, but her family saga about the cosmopolitan Jewish Rakonitz family is still remembered.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Reception Louisa May Alcott
Following her death, G. K. Chesterton in a laudatory (if sexist) review classed LMA with Austen as an early realist, and praised her apt depictions of human truths.
Chesterton, G. K. “Louisa Alcott”. Critical Essays on Louisa May Alcott, edited by Madeleine B. Stern, G. K. Hall, pp. 212-14.
213-14
She was a favourite writer...
Friends, Associates Mary Butts
A party at MB 's flat at 43 Belsize Park Gardens in London was attended by Evelyn Waugh , G. B. Stern , and Rebecca West .
Blaser, Robin et al. “Afterword”. Imaginary Letters, Talonbooks, pp. 61-80.
65
Literary responses Maria Callcott
This time MC succeeded in rivalling A History of England by Mrs. Markham (Elizabeth Penrose ). The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography sees Little Arthur's History of England as proto-Victorian in offering to children...
Textual Production Clemence Dane
After she finished this adaptation, G. B. Stern introduced her to Max Beerbohm. At this meeting the idea of casting Ivor Novello in The Happy Hypocrite first came up, suggested by Beerbohm's niece Viola Tree
Textual Production Pamela Frankau
PF published Shaken in the Wind, the novel with which her friend G. B. Stern felt she first reached her potential.
The title comes from St Matthew's gospel: Christ asks people why they went...
Family and Intimate relationships Pamela Frankau
Her father, Gilbert Frankau , novelist and womaniser, came from a gifted family full of writers. He was divorced from his wife, and (in G. B. Stern 's words) nonchalantly strolled out of [Pamela's] existence...
Friends, Associates Pamela Frankau
Her aunt Eliza Aria introduced the very young PF to many of her older, god-like friends: first of all actress Sybil Thorndike and writers Michael Arlen and Osbert Sitwell .
Frankau, Pamela. I Find Four People. I. Nicholson and Watson.
133-4
Later came John Van Druten
Travel Pamela Frankau
PF was in the USA during the period of collapse described by Stern , but she returned to England in November 1940, as the bombs were falling most thickly.
Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Henry Regnery.
123
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Literary responses Pamela Frankau
Soon after the appearance of this novel G. B. Stern wrote that she would find its emotionally painful scenes almost too hard to read again, were it not for the triumphant-after-pain solution with which it...
Literary responses Rumer Godden
Its first readers loved this book: these included retiring literary agent Curtis Brown , his son Spencer Curtis Brown , and the publishers Peter and Nico Davies (who called it without doubt a masterpiece and...
Residence Georgette Heyer
The following year they moved to a haunted house in Macedonia. In 1930 they returned to England, where they occupied various homes. Their first was near Horsham; the second, where they stayed...
Friends, Associates F. Tennyson Jesse
Gordon Place became the centre of an active female literary community, which included Elizabeth Bowen , Rose Macaulay , Virginia Woolf , Ivy Low (who was also a good friend of Viola Meynell ), Ivy Compton-Burnett
Literary responses Sheila Kaye-Smith
G. B. Stern felt that among SKS 's postwar novels, this one and the next, The View from the Parsonage, 1954, are even superior to her earlier books in humor, shrewdness and mental breadth...
Literary responses Sheila Kaye-Smith
G. B. Stern calls this book Kaye-Smith's most important contribution to Catholic literature.
Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Henry Regnery.
90
Textual Production Sheila Kaye-Smith
With her friend G. B. Stern , SKS published More Talk of Jane Austen, proposed by Kaye-Smith to follow their earlier Talking of Jane Austen, 1943.
British Book News. British Council.
(1951): 52
Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Henry Regnery.
89
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
2538 (22 September 1950): 595

Timeline

1752: Francis Coventry anonymously published The...

Writing climate item

1752

Francis Coventry anonymously published The History of Pompey the Little; or, the life and adventures of a lap-dog, a novelà clef which satirizes Pompey's successive owners.

26 October 1951: At the general election the postwar reforming...

National or international item

26 October 1951

At the general election the postwar reforming Labour government of Clement Attlee polled the highest number of votes it had ever received, but fewer seats than before: it was ousted by the Conservatives under Winston Churchill

Texts

Stern, G. B. "See-Saw". Hutchinson, 1914.
Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Coram, 1957.
Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Henry Regnery, 1958.
Stern, G. B. A Name to Conjure With. Collins, 1953.
Stern, G. B. All in Good Time. Sheed and Ward, 1954.
Stern, G. B. Another Part of the Forest. Cassell, 1941.
Stern, G. B. Benefits Forgot. Cassell, 1949.
Stern, G. B. Bouquet. Chapman and Hall, 1927.
Stern, G. B. Children of No Man’s Land. Duckworth, 1919.
Stern, G. B. He Wrote Treasure Island. Heinemann, 1954.
Stern, G. B. Johnny Forsaken. Collins, 1954.
Stern, G. B. Little Red Horses. Heinemann, 1932.
Stern, G. B. Long Lost Father. E. Benn, 1932.
Stern, G. B. Monogram. Chapman and Hall, 1936.
Kaye-Smith, Sheila, and G. B. Stern. More Talk of Jane Austen. Cassell, 1950.
Stern, G. B. No Son of Mine. Cassell, 1948.
Stern, G. B. Pantomime. Hutchinson, 1914.
Stern, G. B. Pelican Walking. Heinemann, 1934.
Stern, G. B. Promise Not to Tell. Collins, 1964.
Stern, G. B. Shining and Free. Heinemann, 1935.
Kaye-Smith, Sheila, and G. B. Stern. Talking of Jane Austen. Cassell, 1943.
Stern, G. B. Tents of Israel. Chapman and Hall, 1924.
Stern, G. B. The Augs. Heinemann, 1933.
Stern, G. B. The Dark Gentleman. Chapman and Hall, 1927.
Stern, G. B. The Matriarch. French, 1931.