Bainbridge, Oliver, and Alfred Edward Turner. John Strange Winter: A Volume of Personal Record. East and West, 1916.
159
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | John Strange Winter | JSW
had an extensive social circle in London—her biographer, Oliver Bainbridge
, notes that a number of social claims were made upon her by reason of her popularity, and that these were always in advance... |
Publishing | John Strange Winter | Henrietta Palmer (who later wrote as JSW
) attempted to publish her first literary venture, a story entitled either Clotilde's Vengeance or The Story of the French Revolution, at the age of fourteen... |
Reception | John Strange Winter | When Winter's Weekly folded (having been, Oliver Bainbridge
notes, too tenaciously persevered with till the limits of [JSW
's] credit were strained and her husband
's health utterly failed), Bainbridge, Oliver, and Alfred Edward Turner. John Strange Winter: A Volume of Personal Record. East and West, 1916. 159 |
Reception | John Strange Winter | In 1893 JSW
became the first woman to be elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray, Brian Harrison, and Lawrence Goldman, editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Bainbridge, Oliver, and Alfred Edward Turner. John Strange Winter: A Volume of Personal Record. East and West, 1916. 95-6 |
Textual Production | John Strange Winter | Relaying this account in his biography of JSW
, Oliver Bainbridge
wrote that she researched, along with the methods of Wilkie Collins, those of her other favourites including Charles Reade
, Charles
and Henry Kingsley |
Textual Production | John Strange Winter | According to Janet Todd
, JSW
was the owner, editor, and publisher of Winter's Weekly. While Winter certainly acted as editor, it is unclear to what degree she was the periodical's publisher or owner... |
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