Shankman, Lillian F., and Anne Thackeray Ritchie. “Biographical Commentary and Notes”. Anne Thackeray Ritchie: Journals and Letters, edited by Abigail Burnham Bloom et al., Ohio State University Press, 1994, p. various pages.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Author summary | Anne Thackeray Ritchie | ATR
produced, mostly during the later nineteenth century, twenty-one books of fiction, essays, and literary memoirs. Shankman, Lillian F., and Anne Thackeray Ritchie. “Biographical Commentary and Notes”. Anne Thackeray Ritchie: Journals and Letters, edited by Abigail Burnham Bloom et al., Ohio State University Press, 1994, p. various pages. x |
Author summary | Margaret Forster | Margaret Forster
's tally of books, which began to appear in the later twentieth century, neared forty. They run the gamut from novels at one end to history and biography at the other, emphasising the... |
Publishing | Margaret Forster | This is affectionately dedicated to Gordon Forster, Esq.—a suitably Victorian designation for the author's brother. Forster, Margaret. William Makepeace Thackeray. Secker and Warburg, 1978. prelims |
Publishing | Margaret Forster | MF
followed this in 1984 with an edited selection of Thackeray
's own genuine writing, again illustrated with his own sketches: Drawn from Life: The Journalism of William Makepeace Thackeray. This book aims to... |
Publishing | Elizabeth Gaskell | |
Publishing | Caroline Clive | After she became established as a novelist, CC
was approached by the editors of the new Once a Week in April 1859 with a request to write a serial for them: she was their first... |
Publishing | Caroline Clive | The first number of the Cornhill, January 1860, carried a poem by CC
which the editor, Thackeray
, called noble and touching, but after he declined another poem submitted that April Clive contributed nothing further. qtd. in Mitchell, Charlotte. Caroline Clive, 1801-1873, A Bibliography. Victorian Fiction Research Unit, Department of English, The University of Queenland, 1999. 25 |
Publishing | Anne Marsh | Harriet Martineau
was amazed when AM
first read her one of these tales, The Admiral's Daughter, and felt that their hostess later that evening (Sarah Wedgwood
) must have been almost equally amazed... |
Publishing | Sarah Tytler | |
Publishing | Blanche Warre Cornish | During the same year, 1911, BWC
contributed Thackeray
and his Father's Family to the Cornhill (new series 31), and the following year, 1912, she contributed An Impression of Thackeray in his Last Years to the... |
Reception | L. E. L. | The merits of annuals in general were debated, and with some their contents became a byword for poor literary quality. Thus although Christian Isobel Johnstone
considered LEL's Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book for 1836 to... |
Reception | Hannah More | Responses to More's tracts, as to most of her work, reflected their deliberately controversial project. She was widely praised for them among her own class. Someone said she let the poor know that the rich... |
Reception | Matilda Betham-Edwards | Geraldine Jewsbury
, reviewing this book for the Athenæum early the next year, was not exactly encouraging. She guessed the author's gender correctly, and judged the novel a pale imitation of Charlotte Brontë
's Jane... |
Reception | Carolina Oliphant Lady Nairne | As well as the songs already mentioned, the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography names The Hundred Pipers and Wha'll be King but Charlie? as among the handful of COLN
's songs that remained common currency... |
Reception | Caroline Norton | H. F. Chorley
, reviewing for the Athenæum, considered this the most melancholy tale he could recall, and argued that it was not wholesome or an accurate depiction of nature to argue via fiction... |
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