Walker, Dorothea. Sheila Kaye-Smith. Twayne.
85
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Sheila Kaye-Smith | This novel brought critical and popular acclaim. SKS
said that the weeks following its appearance were some of the happiest of her life. Walker, Dorothea. Sheila Kaye-Smith. Twayne. 85 |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | |
Occupation | Frances Horovitz | Patrick Magee
, Harvey Hall
, Stevie Smith
, Hugh Dickson
, and Basil Jones
were the other readers for the project. The poets from whose work they read included W. B. Yeats
, D. H. Lawrence |
Occupation | Catherine Carswell | D. H. Lawrence
asked CC
to coordinate the remaining typing of Lady Chatterley's Lover after his friend Nellie Morrison
removed herself from the project (the book's indecency was liable to put typists off). Lawrence, D. H. The Letters of D.H. Lawrence. Editors Boulton, James T. et al., Cambridge University Press. 6: 259-60 Pilditch, Jan. Catherine Carswell. A Biography. John Donald. 117 |
Occupation | Naomi Royde-Smith | She covered drama criticism for two years, but remained literary editor for a decade. Eliot, T. S. The Letters of T.S. Eliot. Editor Eliot, Valerie, Faber and Faber. 1: 149n1 Hamilton, Mary Agnes. Remembering My Good Friends. Jonathan Cape. 137 |
Occupation | Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche | His attention to questions of power and representation helped spawn poststructuralist theory. His unregenerate misogyny—expressed in contempt for little bluestockings Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, and Michael Tanner. Twilight of the Idols; and, The Anti-Christ. Translator Holligdale, Reginald John, Penguin. 79 Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, and Michael Tanner. Twilight of the Idols; and, The Anti-Christ. Translator Holligdale, Reginald John, Penguin. 80 |
politics | E. M. Forster | After 1924, EMF
turned from writing novels to social and political causes, in particular the issue of freedom of expression. In 1928 he campaigned against the suppression of Radclyffe Hall
's The Well of Loneliness... |
Author summary | Dorothy Brett | DB
, or Brett as she called herself, is chiefly remembered for the pictures she painted, first in London and then in Taos, New Mexico, in the first half of the twentieth century. Her... |
Author summary | Catherine Carswell | CC
is best known for her 1920 novel, Open the Door!, and her insightful critical biography of her close friend D. H. Lawrence
. Her literary corpus consists of two novels, three biographies, and... |
Publishing | Fay Weldon | A TV play she wrote for the BBC, about D. H.
and Frieda Lawrence
in Cornwall during the First World War, was never transmitted, ostensibly because the Lawrence estate had objected about the infringement of... |
Publishing | Dorothy Richardson | When she finished the novel early in 1913, she showed it to Jack Beresford and a publisher. Neither of them was enthusiastic, so the manuscript was stored for some time. In January 1915, Beresford suggested... |
Publishing | Dorothy Richardson | In September 1934, she met S. S. Koteliansky
, known as Kot to such friends and associates as Katherine Mansfield
and John Middleton Murry
, D. H. Lawrence
, and Virginia
and Leonard Woolf
... |
Publishing | Anna Wickham | Nearly twenty years after her death, the Texas Quarterly first published AW
's essay entitled The Spirit of the Lawrence
Women. Wickham, Anna. “Introduction”. Selected Poems, edited by David Garnett, Chatto and Windus, pp. 7-11. 10 |
Publishing | Beryl Bainbridge | In the early twenty-first century BB
was writing a regular column for the New Statesman, and contributing also to The Oldie. When the Tatler had a feature in which contemporary authors re-wrote the... |
Reception | A. S. Byatt | In her introduction for VintageASB
has written of influences on this novel: the visual influence of Samuel Palmer
's painting Cornfield with the Evening Star and of other representations of moonlight and harvest fields... |
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