Rollyson, Carl. Rebecca West: A Saga of the Century. Hodder and Stoughton.
384
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Wealth and Poverty | Dorothy Richardson | |
Textual Production | Rebecca West | RW
's papers are located at the McFarlin Library
in the University of Tulsa
and in the Beinecke Library
at Yale
. Rollyson, Carl. Rebecca West: A Saga of the Century. Hodder and Stoughton. 384 |
Textual Production | Dorothy Richardson | The volume contains a selection of Richardson's approximately 1,800 surviving letters, dated from 1901. It includes her personal and professional letters to such correspondents as Bryher
, H. D.
, Sylvia Beach
, Amy Catherine (Jane) |
Textual Production | Clemence Dane | CD
published the critical work Tradition and Hugh Walpole, in which she offered her views on the modern novel in English. Weintraub, Stanley, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 10. Gale Research. 10: 134 Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. Book Review Digest. H. W. Wilson. (1929): 228 |
Textual Production | Vita Sackville-West | She had been working on it, and reading it aloud to her husband, by the end of 1917. George Moore
, too, read it before publication and suggested the incorporation of a real-life incident which... |
Textual Features | Una Troubridge | UT
wrote much of her 1914 diary in Italian. After 1915, her diaries document her relationship with Radclyffe Hall
, touching on the two women's health, families, travels, and social activities. She also writes about... |
Textual Features | Elizabeth von Arnim | She played with the epistolary form at several points throughout her writing career. She employed the form in Christine (1917), as well as in several unpublished experiments. For these experiments she recruited male writers such... |
Textual Features | Stella Gibbons | Such earthy regionalists—who include Thomas Hardy
and D. H. Lawrence
, as well as Webb
and Kaye-Smith
—become the butt of SG
's satire in Cold Comfort Farm. Oliver, Reggie. Out of the Woodshed: A Portrait of Stella Gibbons. Bloomsbury. 66, 112 |
Textual Features | Stella Gibbons | The title page quotes Sir Thomas Browne
and Hans Christian Andersen
's The Snow Queen, and the book is loosely based on the fairy tale. The autobiographical heroine, Amy, is an aspiring writer working... |
Reception | Dorothy Richardson | Her publisher Richard Church
of Dent
had organised a group of people, including novelist Hugh Walpole
, to write on her behalf to Prime Minister Chamberlain
. The pension allowed Richardson and her husband relief... |
Reception | Virginia Woolf | Woolf's attitude to this honour (which, however, was unusual in that she did not decline it) remained deprecating and satirical. She called it the most insignificant and ridiculous of prizes Woolf, Virginia. The Letters of Virginia Woolf. Editors Nicolson, Nigel and Joanne Trautmann, Hogarth Press. 3: 479 |
Reception | Vita Sackville-West | Woolf reported reading the novel all in a gulp with pleasure in bed; very well done I think. Woolf, Virginia. The Letters of Virginia Woolf. Editors Nicolson, Nigel and Joanne Trautmann, Hogarth Press. 5: 214 |
Publishing | Vita Sackville-West | Her written journalism was complemented by public speaking and broadcasting on the BBC
: on women's rights, literature, travel, and English society. Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 34. Gale Research. 34: 261 |
Performance of text | Louise Page | Another theatrical adaptation by LP
, Rogue Herries (from Hugh Walpole
's novel of the same title, 1930, the first in a series of four that make up the Herries Chronicles) opened at Keswick... |
Literary responses | Molly Keane | At this time Hugh Walpole
called her one of the best half-dozen younger women writers now writing in England. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
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