Beckman, Linda Hunt. Amy Levy: Her Life and Letters. Ohio University Press.
77
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Publishing | Charlotte Lennox | Published in four volumes (her longest) by Cadell
, it had been written some years previously. The section where the heroine's son is carried off by Indians was reprinted as The Lost Son, An Affecting... |
Publishing | Amy Levy | She had written most of its new contents at Dresden and elsewhere on her travels. Beckman, Linda Hunt. Amy Levy: Her Life and Letters. Ohio University Press. 77 |
Publishing | Agnes Strickland | |
Publishing | Maria Edgeworth | John Gibson Lockhart
managed ME
's dealings about this book with the publisher, Bentley
: Bentley was to buy the first edition only, not the continuing copyright, and was to increase the payment if he... |
Publishing | Cecily Mackworth | Routledge
were trying to persuade her to produce this book, very quickly, in late 1946. Hewett, Christopher, editor. The Living Curve : Letters to W. J. Strachan, 1929-1979. Taranman. 73 |
Publishing | Cecily Mackworth | The former volume comprises French poems with English translations by practising English poets whom Mackworth felt to have an affinity with the poets translated. Mackworth, Cecily. Ends of the World. Carcanet. 45 and n |
Occupation | Jeanette Winterson | Her other jobs included working at Gateways
, a well-known lesbian club in London, as a general factotum at the Roundhouse Theatre
, and at domestic work and general organization of life for a... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Dorothy Richardson | While she was working on this novel, her husband Alan Odle
was preparing for a show of his drawings and book illustrations. Both of these projects necessitated their spending the winter in London, and... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Jeanette Winterson | Winterson began writing the novel after she was turned down for a publishing job at Pandora Press
, because the interviewing editor suggested she should write a book about her early life. Adam Mars-Jones
has... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Cecily Mackworth | The title was her publisher's. She wanted to call it Ship of France from Walt Whitman
's O star, O ship of France, beat back and battered long. Mackworth, Cecily. Ends of the World. Carcanet. 37n |
Anthologization | Christina Rossetti | After the appearance of Goblin Market, CR
had less difficulty placing her verse in periodicals. The tide had already started to turn in the 1850s, when her work began to appear in journals including... |
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