Rosenman, Ellen Bayuk. Unauthorized Pleasures. Cornell University Press, 2003.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Constance Smedley | With her sister, CS
began her education at home with her mother as teacher. She read Shakespeare
at four years old, and later learned the violin. She and Ida were concert-goers from an early age... |
Friends, Associates | Maria Theresa Longworth | |
Intertextuality and Influence | George Douglas | The three title-pages of this novel bear lines of poetry on their versoes: from, respectively, Bret Harte
, Whyte Melville
, and Longfellow
. Its tone (except perhaps in the denouement) is quite unlike the... |
Literary responses | Victoria Cross | Reviews of A Girl of the Klondike were generally dismissive. The Academy and Literature concluded that the novel contains plenty of climate, gold, dust, and gore, “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 197 |
Literary responses | Harriet Beecher Stowe | Lydia Maria Child
shared the popular opinion in finding this book tedious. Bret Harte
described it as more provincial than its characters. Hedrick, Joan. Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life. Oxford University Press, 1994. 344, 346, 347 |
Textual Production | Kate Greenaway | Throughout the 1880s KG
illustrated many little books by well-known authors. In 1883 she provided illustrations for Little Ann and Other Poems, a collection by the early nineteenth-century children's writers Ann (later Gilbert)
and... |
Textual Production | Maria Theresa Longworth | From 1869 MTL
began contributing occasionally to several periodicals. She began by submitting a poem to Bret Harte
's Overland Monthly, and four years later contributed a short story, Tale of a Tooth... |
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