E. Nesbit

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Standard Name: Nesbit, E.
Birth Name: Edith Nesbit
Nickname: Daisy
Indexed Name: E. Nesbit
Married Name: Edith Bland
Pseudonym: Ethel Mortimer
Pseudonym: Fabian Bland
Married Name: Edith Tucker
EN , writing in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, was an immensely prolific poet, journalist, novelist, and occasionally a playwright, who is remembered today almost entirely for her enduringly popular story-books for children (which number about forty). Her children's books are highly imaginative and full of fun. They involve their child protagonists in encounters, often magical, with worlds beyond their own: not only in literary, historical, and fantasy encounters, but also in those which raise social and political issues in terms that children can understand. Her writing for adults includes novels, poetry, short stories, plays, magazine contributions and editing, political commentary, and everything that might possibly be undertaken by a hard-up woman of letters.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Noel Streatfeild
In 1961 NS had the honour of appearing in Bodley Head 's series of monographs on children's writers, where she joined such household names as Mary Louisa Molesworth , Juliana Horatia Ewing , Lewis Carroll
Textual Production Judith Kazantzis
This remarkable anthology brings to a wider audience poems by many otherwise unknown writers, as well as by, for instance, Vera Brittain , Edith Sitwell , Nancy Cunard , Cicely Hamilton , Rose Macaulay ,...
Textual Features Rudyard Kipling
As Puck of Pook's Hill opens, the contemporary children Dan and Una unintentionally conjure up the fairy Puck. At first he only tells them stories of the distant past, but then he begins to bring...
Textual Features Philip Larkin
His selection was resolutely unfashionable, favouring Hardy and Betjeman at the expense of Eliot and Pound . He was, however, remarkably generous in his selection of women poets (often for just one or two poems...
Textual Features Ethel Sidgwick
Hatchways is one of ES 's more humorous novels, since much is made of a foreign visitor's response to English culture and his desire to know more about what he takes to be its representatives....
Textual Features Lucy Boston
The adventure side of things is distinctly lacking here; the action of the book consists of Roger's visits backwards and forwards between his own present time and that of the (to him) future residents of...
Textual Features Rosamund Marriott Watson
RMW 's leadership and personal aesthetics steered the periodical towards the arts, while still keeping intact established columns on domestic topics, such as gardening, needlework, cookery and fashion.
Hughes, Linda K. “A Female Aesthete at the Helm: Sylvia’s Journal and ’Graham R. Tomson’, 1893-1894”. Victorian Periodical Review, Vol.
29
, No. 2, pp. 173-92.
175
Pages teemed with poetry and fiction...
Textual Features Mary Louisa Molesworth
The Cuckoo Clock features an actual clock which adorned the nursery of MLM 's children. Its little-girl protagonist is named Griselda, surely after the famous stereotype Patient Griselda. Molesworth's Griselda is motherless; her father and...
Textual Features G. B. Stern
A listing of books which GBS feels to be particularly her own includes Jane Austen , Edna St Vincent Millay , Dorothy Parker , and Rebecca West 's essays. But most of the women authors...
Textual Features A. S. Byatt
The author at the heart of this story is a children's writer, Olive Wellwood, who is married to a wealthy banker and lives in a Kentish farmhouse strangely called Todefright. The actual Edith Nesbit ,...
Textual Features Dinah Mulock Craik
The Adventures of a Brownie makes a wee man in the coal cellar an accessary to children's pleasures.
Mitchell, Sally. Dinah Mulock Craik. Twayne.
86-7
The text is available with illustrations online at the Victorian Women Writers Project at http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/craik/brownie.html.
Similar...
Reception Rosamund Marriott Watson
RMW 's retirement from Sylvia's Journal did not hinder her growing literary reputation. In April 1894 she was featured (as Graham R. Tomson and with a flattering photograph) alongside E. Nesbit , Christina Rossetti ,...
Reception Frances Ridley Havergal
A unique copy has recently surfaced of a tiny book entitled Precious Promises for every day of the week, which combines verses by FRH with coloured illustrations by Ellen Welby . It is unpaginated...
Publishing Flora Thompson
The idea of FT 's next regular outlet for short fiction, the The Catholic Fireside, may have been suggested to her by A. Brodie Frazer , a journalist on the Daily News who apparently...
Publishing Rosamund Marriott Watson
The book is dedicated with affection and esteem
Watson, Rosamund Marriott. The Art of the House. G. Bell and Sons.
prelims
to art critic and professor R. A. M. Stevenson (cousin of the famous novelist). Earlier versions of the essays had appeared in the Pall Mall Gazette...

Timeline

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Texts

Nesbit, E., and A. L. Kellar. The Red House. Methuen, 1902.
Nesbit, E. The Secret of Kyriels. Hurst and Blackett, 1899.
Nesbit, E., and H. R. Millar. The Story of the Amulet. T. Fisher Unwin, 1906.
Nesbit, E. et al. The Story of the Treasure Seekers. T. Fisher Unwin; Frederick A. Stokes, 1899.
Nesbit, E., and H. R. Millar. The Wonderful Garden. Macmillan, 1911.
Nesbit, E., and Reginald B. Birch. The Wouldbegoods. Harper and Brothers, 1901.
Nesbit, E., and Dorothy Boulger. Twice Four. Griffith and Farran, 1891.
Nesbit, E., and H. R. Millar. Wet Magic. T. Werner Laurie, 1913.
Nesbit, E., and George Barraud. Wings and the Child. Hodder and Stoughton, 1913.