“The Edgar Rice Burroughs Library: Shelf D2”. ERBzine: Research.
Clotilde Graves
-
Standard Name: Graves, Clotilde
Birth Name: Clotilde Inez Mary Graves
Pseudonym: Clo. Graves
Pseudonym: Richard Dehan
Richard Dehan she then produced a series of popular historical novels which feature exotic Empire settings, men of action, and extreme emotional situations. Though a website claims she is best known for her humorous novels and stories of witchcraft and pagan religions, her contemporary fame came from her exotic adventure novels.
, who published from the late nineteenth through the first decades of the twentieth century, wrote short stories, an estimated sixteen plays, and novels. Among her fiction, some of the earlier titles concern themselves with women's issues. Under the masculine pseudonym Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Graves, Clotilde. A Mother of Three. S. French, 1909.
Graves, Clotilde. A Sailor’s Home and Other Stories. Books for Libraries Press, 1970.
Graves, Clotilde. A Sailors’ Home and Other Stories. W. Heinemann, 1919.
Graves, Clotilde. A Well-Meaning Woman. Hutchinson, 1896.
Graves, Clotilde. Between Two Thieves. W. Heinemann, 1912.
Graves, Clotilde. Dead Pearls. J. Long, 1932.
Graves, Clotilde et al. Seven Xmas Eves. Hutchinson, 1894.
Graves, Clotilde. The Dop Doctor. W. Heinemann, 1910.
Graves, Clotilde. The Dop Doctor. W. Heinemann, 1914.
Mathers, Helen et al. The Fate of Fenella. Cassell, 1892.
Graves, Clotilde. The Man of Iron. W. Heinemann, 1915.
Graves, Clotilde. The Pirate’s Hand. "Judy" Office, 1889.
Graves, Clotilde. The Sower of the Wind. Little, Brown, 1927.
Graves, Clotilde. The Sower of the Wind. T. Butterworth, 1927.
Graves, Clotilde. Under the Hermés. W. Heinemann, 1917.
Graves, Clotilde. Under the Hermés and Other Stories. Books for Libraries Press, 1970.