Fletcher, Sheila. Maude Royden: A Life. Basil Blackwell.
150n47
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... |
Publishing | Maude Royden | Her publisher, Stanley Unwin
, of George Allen and Unwin
, told her his firm would be glad to be identified with this pamphlet. Fletcher, Sheila. Maude Royden: A Life. Basil Blackwell. 150n47 |
Publishing | Evelyn Sharp | She most probably wrote this novel after the Treaty of Versailles was signed on 28 June 1919. It was published by Allen and Unwin
(where Stanley Unwin
was her personal friend) only after rejection by... |
Publishing | Constance Smedley | Stanley Unwin
's wife
read the manuscript and told her husband that he had got to publish the novel for the sake of its ideas. (Unwin was an internationally-minded pacifist.) The firm signed a contract... |
Publishing | Rose Allatini | It is titled from a phrase in the book of Isaiah which is read by Christians as a prophecy of the persecutions awaiting the Messiah, or Jesus
Christ. Its dedication, To You Who Made Me... |
Reception | Rose Allatini | At this hearing (the second part of the prosecution, following a meeting on 25 September), the political content of the novel was the text, and the (homo)sexual content the subtext. Counsel for the defence pointed... |
Reception | D. H. Lawrence | Penguin was emboldened to embark on the course of action that led to the trial by the Obscene Publications Act of the previous year, which admitted the defence of literary merit against charges of obscenity... |
No bibliographical results available.