Riley, Patricia. Looking for Githa. New Writing North, 2009.
102-3
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Githa Sowerby | Through her husband she acquired a circle of friends including E. V. Lucas
, Kenneth Bird (professionally the cartoonist Fougasse
), Granville-Barker
, and Cyril Hogg
(owner of the music publishing firm Samuel French
). Riley, Patricia. Looking for Githa. New Writing North, 2009. 102-3 |
Friends, Associates | Angela Thirkell | Her literary friends included Lady Cynthia Asquith
, Lady Cynthia's mother Lady Wemyss
, Susan, Lady Tweedsmuir
, and E. V. Lucas
of Punch. With Lucas some kind of breach took place before the... |
Literary responses | Jane Taylor | |
Literary responses | Emily Lawless | The review by E. V. Lucas
in the Times Literary Supplement set out (with some slight rhetorical camouflage) to insinuate both that Edgeworth did not fully deserve her place in this distinguished series, and that... |
Publishing | Eliza Fenwick | At the end of the nineteenth century EF
underwent a brief rediscovery as a children's author. E. V. Lucas
wrote the introduction for a volume of her stories under the title The Bad Family... |
Textual Features | Angela Thirkell | High Rising introduces the character of Laura Morland, a thriller-writer who does not take her art too seriously and who crops up in AT
's later Barchester series in one novel after another. Thirkell called... |
Textual Production | Angela Thirkell | About the time of her memoir Three Houses, AT
showed some friends and acquaintances a draft fiction entitled Three Sillies. E. V. Lucas
told her she had distinct talent although the typescript in... |
Textual Production | Mary Lamb | Their motive this time was purely financial: their friend Robert Lloyd
said it was task work to them. Burton, Sarah. A Double Life: A Biography of Charles and Mary Lamb. Viking, 2003. 253 |
Textual Production | Mary Lamb | The poem first appeared in the Saturday number, in the course of a correspondence about the difficulty of writing Sapphics in English, as by M. S.; the next day someone corrected these initials to... |