Athenæum. J. Lection.
1803 (1862): 660
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Evelyn Sharp | The piece was published the same year. ES
used stories by Richard Garnett
and Nathaniel Hawthorne
as sources. She had been working on her lyrics since June 1927, when she sent Vaughan Williams the fruits... |
Textual Production | Matilda Betham-Edwards | |
Textual Production | Christine Brooke-Rose | Here she examines Stephen Crane
, Nathaniel Hawthorne
, Ezra Pound
, and W. H. Auden
, as examples of the role and operation of poets or fiction writers who also produce criticism. |
Textual Features | Sarah Josepha Hale | Editorial policy was to avoid anything controversial in mainstream politics. The magazine never mentioned the Civil War during the course of the conflict. In contrast to the Ladies' Magazine, the new one had a... |
Textual Features | D. H. Lawrence | Here Lawrence discusses such authors as Fenimore Cooper
, Nathaniel Hawthorne
, Herman Melville
, and Edgar Allan Poe
. |
Textual Features | Rebecca Harding Davis | She achieves this in Bits of Gossip in a series of scattered remembrances of my own generation which included vivid portraits of some of the most prominent men and women of the American nineteenth century... |
Reception | Harriet Beecher Stowe | The Athenæum said that in light of this novel, Mrs. Stowe is a mere child when compared with her countrymanNathaniel Hawthorne
. Athenæum. J. Lection. 1803 (1862): 660 |
Reception | Ethel Lilian Voynich | The Gadfly has been compared to Nathaniel Hawthorne
's The Scarlet Letter, 1850, for its picture of theocratic oppression, and to Emma, Baroness Orczy
's The Scarlet Pimpernel, 1905, as adventure writing. Gray, Anne, and Pam Blevins. The World of Women in Classical Music. WordWorld Publications, pp. 876-7. 877 |
Reception | Fanny Aikin Kortright | Geraldine Jewsbury
's review in the Athenæum was merciless (although she guessed the gender of the author). She called the novel an eminently vulgar book, written apparently with great ease and satisfaction to herself. Athenæum. J. Lection. 1647 (1859): 675 |
Publishing | Fanny Aikin Kortright | FAK
, under the pseudonym Berkeley Aikin, published a novel entitled The Old, Old Story, Love; she sent a presentation copy to Nathaniel Hawthorne
. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
Publishing | Mary Elizabeth Coleridge | Between 1900 and 1907 MEC
published ten poems in periodicals such as the Spectator. She contributed literary reviews to the Guardian, the Monthly Review, and (after 1902) the Times Literary Supplement... |
Occupation | Margaret Fuller | In the Conversations, Fuller covered topics including education, ethics, poetry, and the Classics, typically beginning with a lecture before a group discussion. Members paid for their attendance, and MF
was able to support herself and... |
Occupation | Fanny Kemble | She much preferred reading to full-scale theatrical productions: The happiness of reading Shakespeare's heavenly imaginations is so far beyond all the excitement of acting them. Clinton, Catherine. Fanny Kemble’s Civil Wars. Simon and Schuster. 145 |
Occupation | Leonora Carrington | LC
joined the Eburne, Jonathan P., and Catriona McAra. “Introduction: Leonora Carrington and the international avant-garde”. Leonora Carrington and the international avant-garde, Manchester University Press, pp. 1-16. 4 |
Literary responses | Fanny Fern | Besides being a best seller, Ruth Hall was well received by some critics, although Fern's gender frequently seemed central to their judgments. The Athenæum, noting the work's autobiographical elements, suggested that these could be... |
No bibliographical results available.