Fitzgerald, Penelope. Charlotte Mew and Her Friends. Collins, p. 240 pp.
158, 160
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Publishing | Nina Bawden | |
Publishing | Muriel Spark | Macmillan
recognised the exceptional appeal of this novel with a print-run of 15,150, more than twice that of Spark's previous novel. Its appearance was followed by another massive row with the firm in the person... |
Publishing | Charlotte Mew | The Poetry Bookshop
printed 1,000 copies of the first edition of the collection, which took several years to sell out. Fitzgerald, Penelope. Charlotte Mew and Her Friends. Collins, p. 240 pp. 158, 160 This was a large run for the Poetry Bookshop, which often printed only... |
Publishing | Rumer Godden | This novel also was written at Pollards in Buckinghamshire. RG
consulted the Chairman and Clerk of London's Metropolitan Juvenile Courts
, a police inspector of Bow Street
, the Governors and Secretary of the... |
Publishing | Ouida | |
Publishing | Carol Shields | She set out to portray a woman who had (and needed) good friends, to illuminate those aspects of Moodie
which Moodie herself had kept hidden, and to build on her own sense of connectedness to... |
Publishing | Annie Keary | She found it a great relief to work at Early Egyptian History in the intervals of the melancholy occupation of nursing her mother. It was in connection with this book that she formed an enduring... |
Publishing | Evelyn Sharp | She most probably wrote this novel after the Treaty of Versailles was signed on 28 June 1919. It was published by Allen and Unwin
(where Stanley Unwin
was her personal friend) only after rejection by... |
Publishing | Muriel Spark | As a book it makes barely a hundred pages in largish type. Macmillan
's London edition followed in September, with a slightly reduced print-run of 15,000. The dedication to Dario Ambrosiani
on its first appearance... |
Publishing | Mary Angela Dickens | All the Year Round serialized several other of MAD
's novels. In A Valiant Ignorance, serialized between January and August 1893, she explores family dynamics, with a mother anxious about the consequences of her... |
Publishing | Kate Greenaway | Von Arnim had published her first and most famous book just two years before this, and was now in a financial crisis. This little book was printed in London and New York by Macmillan and Co. |
Publishing | Evelyn Sharp | ES
had personally admired Ayrton, but she found the writing of biography, especially the scientific research, an uphill struggle. In pursuing her material she corresponded with Marie Curie
, to whom she dedicated the result... |
Publishing | Margaret Laurence | She had cut down her first draft, of nearly 700 pages in typescript, to 578 pages, and intended to cut it by another hundred. It was, however, accepted by all of her publishers: McClelland and Stewart |
Publishing | Muriel Spark | Macmillan
made an error in their jacket blurb (courtless for countless), which Spark discovered only after many copies had been despatched. The remaining jacket stock was pulped, but that was her last novel... |
Publishing | Augusta Gregory |
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