Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Lydia Howard Sigourney | |
Material Conditions of Writing | Sarah Lewis | SL
seems to have turned from poetry to drama after Poe
's death and her own divorce. |
names | Sarah Lewis |
|
Occupation | Charles Baudelaire | Remembered largely for his poetry, whose early publication provoked a major crisis in censorship, CB
also wrote important prose, especially criticism, and translated Edgar Allan Poe
's stories into French. As a literary and art... |
Occupation | Richard Hengist Horne | Educated at Sandhurst
, RHH
started writing and editing in his thirties after a spell in the Mexican navy. His verse was praised by Thomas Carlyle
and Edgar Allan Poe
. He also adapted plays... |
Occupation | Herman Melville | Impelled to write about his maritime adventures, he published Typee in 1846, and its sequel Omoo in 1847. Both of these first books were popular but Moby Dick (first published in England on 18 October... |
Author summary | Sarah Lewis | Sarah Anna Lewis
was a mid-nineteenth-century American poet who is today better known for her association with Edgar Allan Poe
than for her writings. She began her career with frequent periodical publications, then published four... |
Publishing | Sarah Lewis | Perhaps in part owing to Poe
's praise, Records of the Heart was in its eleventh edition by the time of SL
's death. Garraty, John A., and Mark C. Carnes, editors. American National Biography. Oxford University Press, 1999, 24 vols. 13: 571 |
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 | Lydia Howard Sigourney | Throughout her career LHS
was prolific in magazine publication: many of her volumes of poetry consist largely of pieces reprinted from periodicals. “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 239 |
Reception | Catharine Amy Dawson Scott | This novel received excellent reviews and in early 1920 reached the short-list of three English submissions for the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse, which however went in the end to Cicely Hamilton
. In The Observer... |
Reception | Mary Stewart | This book was awarded the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award (named after Edgar Allan Poe
) and stayed on the New York Times best-seller list for eight months. “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. Friedman, Lenemaja. Mary Stewart. Twayne Publishers, 1990. xiv |
Reception | Sarah Lewis | |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Bishop | The volume reproduces in facsimile no fewer than sixteen drafts of one of EB
's best-known poems, One Art; Quinn's notes include snippets of rejection letters from the New Yorker. White, Gillian. “Awful but Cheerful”. London Review of Books, 25 May 2006, pp. 8-10. 10 |
Textual Features | Sarah Josepha Hale | Editorial policy was to avoid anything controversial in mainstream politics. The magazine never mentioned the Civil War during the course of the conflict. In contrast to the Ladies' Magazine, the new one had a... |
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