Stevie Smith
-
Standard Name: Smith, Stevie
Birth Name: Florence Margaret Smith
Nickname: Peggy
Nickname: Stevie
Pseudonym: S. S.
SS
, publishing in the mid twentieth century, was a poet who is hard to categorise. All of her works—poetry, novels, stories, essays, reviews, a radio play, and her inimitable drawings— have a quirkiness, a pretence of naivete which masks an unyielding and uncomforting view of life. All of them, too, are based on her own life and the lives of her friends: the last characteristic brought a number of difficulties like resentment and threats of libel actions.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Health | Olivia Manning | In March 1948 Stevie Smith
thought her depressed. David, Deirdre. Olivia Manning: A Woman at War. Oxford University Press, 2012. 182 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Shena Mackay | This short novel, with a large cast centred on a district in South London, vibrates with the tension between satire and sympathy. The title is ironic: the protagonist, Lyris Crane, is a painter too... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Monica Furlong | She begins arrestingly: We live in a period in which it is not possible to talk meaningfully about God. Furlong, Monica. The End of Our Exploring. Hodder and Stoughton, 1973. 13 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Edna O'Brien | EOB
has named many women writers as important to her: she includes among these Jane Austen
, Emily Dickinson
, Elizabeth Bowen
, Anna Akhmatova
, Anita Brookner
, and Margaret Atwood
, adding: Every... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anita Brookner | It is titled from the apparently Swiss resort hotel where the heroine, Edith Hope, is packed off by her friends after an embarrassing public faux pas. Trapped in an unsuspected love-affair with a married man... |
Literary responses | Muriel Spark | British Book News began to cool wirh this novel: this time her central character is scarcely a sufficiently plausible figure to dominate the story as the plot requires. British Book News. British Council. (1960): 289 |
Literary responses | Rosamond Lehmann | RL
's Epilogue relates her own anxiety, on the day the book was first published, about its probable reception. She was flooded with relief, joy, gratitude, at finding both Cyril Connolly
and Philip Toynbee |
Literary responses | Ivy Compton-Burnett | Printed praise came from Stevie Smith
and Raymond Mortimer
among others. Elizabeth Taylor
noticed how the reviewers' imagery harped on weapons: rapiers, axes, stilettos, knives and grenades. Spurling, Hilary. Secrets of a Woman’s Heart. Hodder and Stoughton, 1984. 213 |
Literary responses | Ada Leverson | Stevie Smith
in 1951 called Anne Yeo an astonishing portrait for the period. qtd. in Burkhart, Charles. Ada Leverson. Twayne, 1973. 107 Burkhart, Charles. Ada Leverson. Twayne, 1973. 153n3 |
Literary responses | Ada Leverson | This novel was widely praised when it appeared. The Daily Mail reviewer, however, dismissed it as the typically inferior product of a lady writer, comparing it to its disadvantage with Dolores, first (and now... |
Literary responses | Jean Rhys | Critic Sanford Sternlicht comments that her writing is like that of Stevie Smith
, a contemporary who also seemed to relate to animals better than she related to people. Sternlicht, Sanford. Jean Rhys. Twayne, 1997. 131 |
Literary responses | Amber Reeves | Ernest Jones
, reviewing this book in The International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, made no objection to her distinction between superego and moral code. The book was also reviewed by Stevie Smith
. Reeves, Amber. Ethics for Unbelievers. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1948. vi “Stevie Smith Papers. Series II: Book Reviews”. McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa: Department of Special Collections and University Archives. |
Literary responses | Ethel M. Dell | Stevie Smith
, selecting EMD
's The Way of an Eagle as the eleventh in a list of Best Sellers of the Century for the Observer newspaper, praised it in very high terms. qtd. in Dell, Penelope. Nettie and Sissie. Hamish Hamilton, 1977. 167 |
Literary responses | Olivia Manning | OM
resented a review by Stevie Smith
in the Sunday Times, which praised the many loving and studious things said here about cats, but then mixed its metaphors to devastating effect: Just a little... |
Literary responses | Olivia Manning | This book evoked a double-edged response from Ivy Compton-Burnett
who, writing to Elizabeth Taylor
, said: It really is full of very good descriptions. Quite excellent descriptions. I don't know if you care for descriptions... |
Timeline
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Texts
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