Rattenbury, Arnold. “How the sanity of poets can be edited away”. London Review of Books, pp. 15 -19.
17-18
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Storm Jameson | Jameson met Romer Wilson
, Charles Morgan
, and J. W. N. Sullivan
through her Knopf
connections. By about 1924 she and Edith Sitwell
had visited each other's homes. Jameson felt that in spite of... |
Intertextuality and Influence | E. M. Delafield | The diary abounds with references to contemporary literature, including several internal allusions to Time and Tide. The Provincial Lady engages in friendly rivalry over its competitions for readers and describes social encounters with the... |
Reception | Virginia Woolf | The first reviews of Mrs. Dalloway came out in the same month as those of The Common Reader (first series). Both the Western Mail and the Scotsman dismissed the novel as beyond the general reader... |
Textual Production | Bryony Lavery | BL
's numerous plays for radio include some original and some adapted from other works: Laying Ghosts, The Twelve Days of Christmas, Velma and Therese (a parallel version of the film Thelma and... |
Textual Production | Sylvia Townsend Warner | STW
began writing poetry as a member of a group called the New Elizabethans, centred in Oxford and including Richard Hughes
, Roy Campbell
, and Ivor Gurney
. Yeats
was also a sympathiser. Rattenbury, Arnold. “How the sanity of poets can be edited away”. London Review of Books, pp. 15 -19. 17-18 |
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