Duckworth

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Dedications Virginia Woolf
VW 's first novel, The Voyage Out, dedicated To L. W., was published by Duckworth and Company .
Hussey, Mark. Virginia Woolf A to Z. Facts on File, 1995.
328, 335
Family and Intimate relationships Virginia Woolf
Gerald Duckworth (1870-1937) established the firm that became Duckworth & Co. , publishers. He published VW 's first two novels, The Voyage Out, 1915, and Night and Day, 1919.
Intertextuality and Influence Beryl Bainbridge
The married couple Colin Haycraft and Alice Thomas Ellis (herself a writer) both worked at Gerald Duckworth publishers, and met BB while she was working there as a clerk. They taught her to write properly...
Literary responses Dorothy Richardson
Reviewers, one of whom was American poet Marianne Moore , considered the book very handsome. Its publisher, Jackson , took an increased interest in Richardson as a novelist even before this text came out, and...
Material Conditions of Writing Dorothy Richardson
During the summer of 1919, DR made various appeals to Curtis Brown and Alfred Knopf for money to live on, as she earned virtually nothing from the American editions of her previous books. She was...
Occupation Beryl Bainbridge
BB began working as a part-time clerk for the publishing firm Gerald Duckworth , where Colin Haycraft and his wife Anna (the writer Alice Thomas Ellis ) provided invaluable advice for her writing career.
Anna...
Occupation Beryl Bainbridge
The four shillings and sixpence an hour she earned in this job went to supplement her payment from Duckworth of a little over seven pounds a week.
Taylor, Debbie. “Interview with Beryl Bainbridge”. Mslexia, Vol.
19
, Oct. 2003, pp. 14-16.
14
Occupation Beryl Bainbridge
With her publishers, Duckworth , in financial difficulties in 1989, exacerbated by embarking on misconceived and expensive publicity schemes, BB often acted as go-between for Colin Haycraft and his potential, competing backers Roger Shashoua and...
Publishing Antonia White
Her husband Tom Hopkinson used persuasion and compulsion to get her to complete her manuscript, giving her deadlines for reading it to him, chapter by chapter.
Vaux, Anna. “Biscuits. Oh good!”. London Review of Books, 27 May 1999, pp. 32-4.
32
Hopkinson, Amanda. “Aunt Tony”. London Review of Books, 10 June 1999, pp. 4-5.
4
It was then rejected by a whole...
Publishing Evelyn Waugh
Its working title was Untoward Incidents. It was rejected as obscene by Duckworth before Waugh turned to his father's firm.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
It is dedicated in Homage and Affection to EW 's Oxford friend and mentor Harold Acton .
Waugh, Evelyn. Decline and Fall. Chapman, 1928.
prelims
Publishing Elinor Glyn
Duckworth published EG 's epistolary novelLetters to Caroline in April 1914, after it had been serialised in Nash's Magazine.
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
Publishing Eva Mary Bell
She dedicated it to G. H. B. (her husband) and R. C. H. , who must be either her father or her brother who bore the same name. The original publisher, Duckworth , put out...
Publishing Elinor Glyn
Shortly after the publication of The Career of Katherine Bush, Duckworth signed a contract with Jonathan Cape to publish cheap editions of EG 's books. This contract greatly expanded her reading public, as well...
Publishing Catherine Carswell
The novel had been submitted to Duckworth in the spring of 1918, but was rejected as too long (production costs had more than doubled as a result of the war). Chatto and Windus offered a...
Publishing Elinor Glyn
EG 's war novel, Elizabeth's Daughter (1918), was published in serial form both in English periodicals by Frank Newnes , and in American ones by the Hearst press. Hearst used the title Elizabeth's Daughter Visits...

Timeline

1912: Janet Dodge published her novel Tony Unregenerate...

Women writers item

1912

Janet Dodge published her novel Tony Unregenerate through Duckworth .
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.

Texts

The English Review. Duckworth, 64 vols.
Bainbridge, Beryl. A Quiet Life. Duckworth, 1976.
Bainbridge, Beryl. An Awfully Big Adventure. Duckworth, 1989.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Every Man for Himself. Duckworth, 1996.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Filthy Lucre. Duckworth, 1986.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Harriet Said . . . Duckworth, 1972.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Injury Time. Duckworth, 1977.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Master Georgie. Duckworth, 1998.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Mum and Mr. Armitage. Duckworth, 1985.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Something Happened Yesterday. Duckworth, 1993.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Sweet William. Duckworth, 1975.
Bainbridge, Beryl. The Birthday Boys. Duckworth, 1991.
Bainbridge, Beryl. The Bottle Factory Outing. Duckworth, 1974.
Bainbridge, Beryl. The Dressmaker. Duckworth, 1973.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Winter Garden. Duckworth, 1980.
Bainbridge, Beryl. Young Adolf. Duckworth, 1978.
Bayley, John. Iris and the Friends: A Year of Memories. Duckworth, 1999.
Bayley, John. Iris: A Memoir of Iris Murdoch. Duckworth, 1998.
Beaton, Cecil, and Elinor Glyn. “Introduction”. Three Weeks, Duckworth, 1974, p. v - xxvii.
Bell, Eva Mary. Happiness. Duckworth, 1916.
Bell, Eva Mary. Sahib-log. Duckworth, 1910.
Black, Clementina, and Alfred George Gardiner. Sweated Industry and the Minimum Wage. Duckworth, 1907.
Blackwood, Caroline. For All That I Found There. Duckworth, 1973.
Blackwood, Caroline. Great Granny Webster. Duckworth, 1977.
Blackwood, Caroline. The Stepdaughter. Duckworth, 1976.