John Blackwood

Standard Name: Blackwood, John

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Lucy Walford
The volume is the source of most biographical information about Walford. It runs from her early life and ends on a high note in her literary career: her appearance in front of Queen Victoria ...
Textual Production George Eliot
GE began writing Adam Bede in October 1857. She decided, this time, against serialization.
Ashton, Rosemary. George Eliot: A Life. Hamish Hamilton.
187, 197
The first person but Lewes to read any of it (the opening thirteen chapters) was John Blackwood on the...
Textual Production George Eliot
GE published The Spanish Gypsy, a poem with some faint resemblance to a verse drama. To Blackwood she wrote that it was not a Romance. It is—prepare your fortitude—a poem.
Eliot, George. The George Eliot Letters. Editor Haight, Gordon S., Yale University Press.
4: 354
Hands, Timothy. A George Eliot Chronology. G. K. Hall.
106
Textual Production Eliza Lynn Linton
She mentioned to publisher John Blackwood her certainty that she had faculties that might be utilized to the making of beautiful books.
Anderson, Nancy F. Woman against Women in Victorian England. Indiana University Press.
100
Reception George Eliot
Many friends of GE including Edith J. Simcox , plus biographers such as Gordon S. Haight , believed that readers had reason to be grateful to G. H. Lewes for his tireless protection of GE
Reception Lucy Walford
LW 's commentary suggest she was superficial in her judgements, anchoring her opinions time and again on appearance. A prominent example comes in her assessment of George Eliot , with whom she was invited to...
Publishing Margaret Oliphant
At one point John Blackwood objected that an instalment was too short: Oliphant did not insist on her own preference, but agreed to break the narrative in a different place.
Jay, Elisabeth. Mrs Oliphant: "A Fiction to Herself": A Literary Life. Clarendon Press.
274
The novel appeared in...
Publishing George Eliot
GE was already at work on her next novel when Adam Bede was published. For the first time, this novel set her at the centre of a kind of bidding war in the book trade....
Publishing Lucy Walford
The successful publication of Mr. Smith initiated a positive working relationship with her publisher John Blackwood . She found his approach to corrections delicate, and its effect salutary. In Recollections, LW speaks very...
Publishing George Eliot
This departure from her usual publisher, Blackwood , was precipitated by a princely offer from George Smith of the Cornhill of £10,000 (the largest offer ever, although they eventually settled on £7,000 for copyright over...
Publishing George Eliot
She began work on it by 6 September 1864, but within a few months (in February 1865) she was so bogged down and anxious that Lewes confiscated her manuscript. She took it up again in...
Publishing George Eliot
George Henry Lewes persuaded Blackwood to undertake this unusual mode of publication, because Middlemarch was too long to fit the three-volume format which was by now the staple of the circulating library. They hoped to...
Publishing George Eliot
GE adopted in writing to her publisher, John Blackwood , her now famous pseudonym: before this Blackwood had written to her as author of, or even as Dear Amos.
Eliot, George. The George Eliot Letters. Editor Haight, Gordon S., Yale University Press.
2: 290-2
Publishing George Eliot
Having become deeply interested herself in Jewish culture and history, GE aimed in this book to widen the English vision a little.
Eliot, George. The George Eliot Letters. Editor Haight, Gordon S., Yale University Press.
6: 304
The parts sold 7,500 copies, and GE 's letter of thanks...
Publishing Emily Gerard
Dorothea thought up the plot for this book while she was supposed to be saying her morning prayers at her bedside. The sisters drafted it at a length sufficient to fill four volumes. They had...

Timeline

April 1817: The first issue of Blackwood's Edinburgh...

Writing climate item

April 1817

The first issue of Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine appeared; founder William Blackwood intended to offer Tory competition to the liberal Edinburgh Review.

Texts

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