Beauman, Nicola. Cynthia Asquith. Hamish Hamilton.
235ff
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Lady Cynthia Asquith | |
Travel | Lady Cynthia Asquith | From 1921 onwards, she and her children spent every August in possession of Stanway, a holiday funded by Barrie
, who stayed with them and paid rent for them to LCA
's mother, who... |
Occupation | Lady Cynthia Asquith | During the war LCA
received the last of three successive offers of significant acting roles, despite her total lack of dramatic training. Towards Christmas 1909 she had taken part in a charity production at the... |
Friends, Associates | Lady Cynthia Asquith | As well as her close relationships with Angela Thirkell
and Barrie
, LCA
built a significant friendship with the novelist D. H. Lawrence
(who has been seen as drawing her portrait in The Blind Man... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Lady Cynthia Asquith | She had a romantic friendship during the years 1918 and 1919 with Desmond MacCarthy
, who was less than ten years her senior and a member of the Bloomsbury group. Beauman, Nicola. Cynthia Asquith. Hamish Hamilton. 235ff |
Family and Intimate relationships | Lady Cynthia Asquith | Barrie
was a famous writer making huge sums of money when LCA
met him. He was about the age of her father, had been unsuccessfully married, and doted on the idea of motherhood and on... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Beryl Bainbridge | An Awfully Big Adventure is set in 1950. Its title is the phrase which J. M. Barrie
's Peter Pan uses about death. Its protagonist, Stella, works for a Liverpool repertory company as BB
had... |
Textual Production | Beryl Bainbridge | In 2003 BB
was at work on a detective novel currently titled Dear Brutus (a title borrowed from J. M. Barrie
, replacing the earlier The Might Have Been) and set in the 1970s... |
Textual Production | Dorothy Brett | The Washington Post published a strange and hilariously wrong bulletin heralding DB
's apparently non-existent pretensions to writing plays, and her equally non-existent engagement to J. M. Barrie
. “J. M. Barrie to Wed Again: Daughter of Lord Esher Said to be Be-trothed to Novelist”. The Washington Post, p. 4. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Dorothy Brett | DB
's younger sister, Sylvia, later Lady Brooke
, born in 1885, is herself of no minor literary significance. She authored numerous works including two autobiographies, romance novels, and short stories, and claimed J. M. Barrie |
Textual Features | A. S. Byatt | The author at the heart of this story is a children's writer, Olive Wellwood, who is married to a wealthy banker and lives in a Kentish farmhouse strangely called Todefright. The actual Edith Nesbit
,... |
Textual Production | Willa Cather | Six months after J. M. Barrie
's novel Sentimental Tommy began to appear serially in Scribner's Magazine, WC
published in the Home Monthly her very short (ten-page) story entitled Tommy, The Unsentimental. Abate, Michelle Ann. “Constructing Modernist Lesbian Affect from Late Victorian Masculine Emotionalism: Willa Cather’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl="a">Tommy, The Unsentimental</span> and J. M. Barrie’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Sentimental Tommy</span>”;. Women’s Writing, Vol. 18 , No. 4, pp. 468-85. 468 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Willa Cather | Though Cather admired Barrie
in general, she puts forward her Tommy (baptised Theodosia), a tomboyish and business-minded young woman, to counter his sensitive and artistic young man. Abate, Michelle Ann. “Constructing Modernist Lesbian Affect from Late Victorian Masculine Emotionalism: Willa Cather’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl="a">Tommy, The Unsentimental</span> and J. M. Barrie’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Sentimental Tommy</span>”;. Women’s Writing, Vol. 18 , No. 4, pp. 468-85. 469 |
Textual Production | Richmal Crompton | The title implies opposition to Sir J. M. Barrie
's immensely popular Peter Pan; or, The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up, 1904. RC
published her early stories using the surname Crompton rather than... |
Literary responses | Ella Hepworth Dixon | J. M. Barrie
greatly admired a one-act play by EHD
, presumably this one. Several reviewers found novelty and promise in The Toyshop of the Heart. Fehlbaum, Valerie. Ella Hepworth Dixon: the Story of a Modern Woman. Ashgate. 150, 161 |
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