Stratton, Susan. “Muriel Jaeger’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>The Question Mark</span>, a Response to Bellamy and Wells”. Foundation, No. 80, pp. 62-9.
65
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Dorothy Richardson | This companion novel to The Tunnel presents the relations of Miriam, a young woman in her early twenties, with the other occupants of her Bloomsbury boarding-house. Her friendship with Hypo G. Wilson, the character based... |
Textual Features | Muriel Jaeger | MJ
's introduction says that the world of this novel is a Bellamy-Morris-Wells world. Stratton, Susan. “Muriel Jaeger’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>The Question Mark</span>, a Response to Bellamy and Wells”. Foundation, No. 80, pp. 62-9. 65 |
Textual Features | Winifred Peck | The story opens with a young man returning from the First World War and ends with young people returning from the second. At the outset seventeen-year-old Miranda Rae, living in Devon with her family, receives... |
Textual Features | G. B. Stern | |
Textual Features | G. B. Stern | GBS
describes one of her own short stories in a manner that reflects oddly on the oblivion which enfolded earlier women writers during her career. The story concerns a beautiful, elegant young woman who feels... |
Residence | Arnold Bennett | At the end of 1922 AB
moved to 75 Cadogan Square in London with Dorothy Cheston, after separating from his wife Marguerite the previous year. He and Dorothy moved once again, in November 1930, to... |
Residence | Dorothy Richardson | Looking for more privacy because of her new romance with H. G. Wells
, DR
moved from Endsleigh Street to Woburn Walk, where she shared a flat with an acquaintance named Miss Moffatt
. Fromm, Gloria G. Dorothy Richardson: A Biography. University of Illinois Press. 44-5 |
Reception | Arnold Bennett | This novel won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and Bennett was buoyed up by positive reviews from J. B. Priestley
, H. G. Wells
, Joseph Conrad
and Thomas Hardy
. He was annoyed... |
Reception | Annie Besant | The future suffragist Mary Gawthorpe
, encountering Karma about ten years after it was written, was profoundly affected. She felt that she sensed a reciprocal understanding, and read this with a different part of her... |
Publishing | Catharine Amy Dawson Scott | In 1923 she wrote a series of articles for Strand Magazine, entitled As I know them—Some Writers of Today, describing, among others, Clemence Dane
and H. G. Wells
. Watts, Marjorie, and Frances King. Mrs. Sappho. Duckworth. 129 |
Publishing | Margaret Haig, Viscountess Rhondda | In 1909, during the height of her involvement with the WSPU
, Margaret Haig Mackworth
(later MHVR
) began publishing articles in praise of militancy Spender, Dale. Time and Tide Wait for No Man. Pandora Press, http://UofA. 34 Spender says she was... |
Publishing | Margaret Haig, Viscountess Rhondda | |
Publishing | Dorothy Richardson | H. G. Wells
offered to find her another publisher than Duckworth
, as he felt she could do better in terms of remuneration and publicity with someone else. Finally, after the manuscript was refused by... |
Publishing | Amber Reeves | The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind, published this year in the USA and in 1932 in Britain, is listed by library catalogues as the work of H. G. Wells
alone; it seems... |
Author summary | Amber Reeves | AR
, who began publishing shortly before the First World War, produced three clear-eyed and unsentimental novels about the predicament of the modern woman (including the difficulty of reconciling her sexuality with the social world)... |
No timeline events available.
No bibliographical results available.