Elizabeth Jenkins

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Standard Name: Jenkins, Elizabeth
Birth Name: Margaret Elizabeth Heald Jenkins
EJ , whose productive period extended from just after World War Two into the twenty-first century, was the author of half a dozen historical biographies and twice that many novels (several of which portray women in the position of victims of one kind or another), besides a play, book reviews, and a memoir. Some of her works have been often reprinted.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Naomi Royde-Smith
NRS dedicated her work to Florence Mary Parsons (calling her, with formal correctness, Mrs. Clement Parsons), author of the twenty-five-year-old definitive biography of Siddons. People she acknowledges include her husband (for advice about old...
Textual Production Agatha Christie
The origin of the stage play was a radio play. Elizabeth Jenkins tells a story that this was based on the actual killing of a war evacuee by the farmer with whom he and his...
Textual Production Margaret Kennedy
Other notable women authors also contributed to this series, including three of MK 's writing friends: Lettice Cooper , Elizabeth Jenkins , and Marghanita Laski .
Powell, Violet. The Constant Novelist. W. Heinemann.
178
Textual Production Marghanita Laski
Other contributors to the volume included Lettice Cooper , Elizabeth Jenkins , Margaret Kennedy , and Katharine Briggs .
Textual Production Theodora Benson
As Elizabeth Jenkins told it, this began as an idea for a reportage novel illuminating the secrets of some particular métier. Jenkins hoped for something of morbid decadence reminiscent of Edgar Allan Poe , but...
Textual Features Ngaio Marsh
She named her detective-hero Roderick Alleyn after the Elizabethan actor and theatre entrepreneur Edward Alleyn (who founded the school where her father had been educated, and a biography of whom by Elizabeth Jenkins was published...
Residence Theodora Benson
Late in the second world war she was living in a small flat perched at the top of one of the tall buildings of Piccadilly, with no storage space and precious possessions stacked around...
Residence Elizabeth Bowen
EB later speculated about what her feelings would be if Bowen's Court were to burn down. Elizabeth Jenkins found it a beautiful and mournful spectacle. . . . so scantily furnished as to seem almost...
Reception Charlotte Yonge
E. M. Delafield writes that during the 1940s CY retained wide popularity: that the London Library 's copies of her books were often checked out by readers, and that when Delafield wrote to the Times...
Publishing Theodora Benson
Elizabeth Jenkins wrote that before the second world war TB had a brilliant, brief career in popular journalism, like the flash of a kingfisher across a stream.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The View from Downshire Hill. Michael Johnson.
59
After the war she was commissioned by...
Occupation Theodora Benson
During the Second World War TB worked for the Ministry of Information , writing Speaker's Notes, material for public speeches explaining the war effort.Elizabeth Jenkins , her assistant, said she was brilliant at this...
Literary Setting Elizabeth Bowen
The novel has two heroines: Portia, a fifteen-year-old, and Anna Quayne, wife of Thomas Quayne. Portia, Thomas' half-sister, comes to live with the Quaynes in their Regent's Park house (based on EB 's own London...
Literary responses Angela Thirkell
AT never over-estimated her own talent. She wrote that she and her fictional alter-ego, Laura Morland, each write the same book each year with unfailing regularity, and called her own work not very good books...
Literary responses Elizabeth Bowen
Glendinning writes: She is what happened after Bloomsbury; she is the link that connects Virginia Woolf with Iris Murdoch and Muriel Spark .
Glendinning, Victoria. Elizabeth Bowen. Alfred A. Knopf.
xv
Elizabeth Jenkins characteristically remarked that as Britain's leading woman of letters...
Literary responses Monica Dickens
It caused, however, considerable outrage in some nursing circles. Going back to the hospital to visit a patient, MD disguised herself as far as possible, knowing that her book could not have been welcome. A...

Timeline

25-26 June 1483: The child King Edward V was deposed, and...

National or international item

25-26 June 1483

The child King Edward V was deposed, and Richard III assumed the throne of England.

22 July 1949: The house in the village of Chawton in Hampshire...

Women writers item

22 July 1949

The house in the village of Chawton in Hampshire where Jane Austen lived with her mother and sister from 1809 until her death was opened to the public, having been bought for three thousand pounds...

Early 1957: John Braine's novel Room at the Top was published...

Writing climate item

Early 1957

John Braine 's novelRoom at the Top was published by Gollancz after eight rejections, on the advice of Elizabeth Jenkins in her capacity as publisher's reader.
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
(1 March 1957): 125
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The View from Downshire Hill. Michael Johnson.
107-8

Texts

Jenkins, Elizabeth. A Silent Joy. Constable, 1992.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Brightness. Victor Gollancz, 1963.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Dr. Gully. Joseph, 1971.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Elizabeth and Leicester. Gollancz, 1961.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Elizabeth the Great. Gollancz, 1958.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Harriet. Gollancz, 1934.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Henry Fielding. Home & Van Thal, 1947.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. “Hon. Theodora Benson”. Times, No. 57452, p. 8.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Honey. Gollancz, 1968.
Jenkins, Sir Michael, and Elizabeth Jenkins. “Introduction”. The View from Downshire Hill: A Memoir, Michael Russell, 2004, pp. 9-12.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Jane Austen. V. Gollancz, 1938.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Jane Austen. Minerva Press, 1969.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Joseph Lister. Nelson, 1960.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Lady Caroline Lamb. V. Gollancz, 1932.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Six Criminal Women. Sampson Low, 1949.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Ten Fascinating Women. Coward-McCann Inc., 1968.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Tennyson and Dr. Gully. Tennyson Society, Tennyson Research Centre, 1974.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The Mystery of King Arthur. Joseph, 1975.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The Shadow and the Light: A Defence of Daniel Douglas Home, the Medium. H. Hamilton, 1982.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The Tortoise and the Hare. V. Gollancz, 1954.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The View from Downshire Hill. Michael Johnson, 2004.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. The Winters. V. Gollancz, 1931.
Jenkins, Elizabeth. Virginia Water. V. Gollancz, 1929.