“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
43576 (15 February 1924): 17
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Ella D'Arcy | Letters from EDA
to John Lane
, now in the Clark Library
in Los Angeles, were edited by Allan Anderson
in 1990. |
Textual Production | Ella D'Arcy | John Lane
of the Bodley Head
(publisher of The Yellow Book and one of the most innovative in the business during the 1890s) issued Monochromes, the first of two volumes which between them contain... |
Textual Production | Ella D'Arcy | John Lane
of the Bodley Head
published Modern Instances, his second of two volumes of stories by EDA
. The title, from Jacques' Seven Ages of Man speech in William ShakespeareAs You Like It... |
Textual Production | Ella D'Arcy | EDA
's last book was her translation into English of Ariel, the biography of Percy Bysshe Shelley
written by André Maurois
, published, like her other books, by John Lane
. “The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive. 43576 (15 February 1924): 17 Clarke, John Stock. Ella D’Arcy. |
Publishing | Victoria Cross | VC
began her literary career by sending manuscripts of the novel The Refiner's Fire and short story Different Views to publisher John Lane
. Mitchell, Charlotte. Victoria Cross, 1868-1952: A Bibliography. Victorian Fiction Research Unit, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, The University of Queensland. 16 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Victoria Cross | Reviews of Theodora were mixed. Janet Hogarth
, in a Fortnightly Review article titled Literary Degenerates, and B. A. Crackanthorpe
in Nineteenth Century, criticised the story's representation of sexual desire. “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 135 |
Publishing | Victoria Cross | Little of the critical speculation about the genealogy of The Woman Who Didn't has been confirmed. Charlotte Mitchell
posits that the risqué subject matter of the novel VC
produced after signing a contract with Lane |
Textual Production | Agatha Christie | AC
's first detective novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles (introducing her Belgian detective Hercule Poirot), was published in London by John Lane
at Bodley Head
and copyrighted as 1920. Sanders, Dennis, and Len Lovallo. The Agatha Christie Companion. Delacorte. 9-10 |
Publishing | Agatha Christie | It was rejected by six publishers before Lane
contracted for it, paying AC
no advance or royalties until two thousand five hundred copies had been sold. She earned £25 in all from this edition. The... |
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