qtd. in
Colenbrander, Joanna. A Portrait of Fryn. A. Deutsch, 1984.
213
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | F. Tennyson Jesse | The New Yorker described the letters as having vigour, clarity, humour and elegance, and found FTJ
and her husband a tough pair of gentle writers. qtd. in Colenbrander, Joanna. A Portrait of Fryn. A. Deutsch, 1984. 213 |
Occupation | Storm Jameson | She was introduced to Alfred
and Blanche Knopf
by her publisher and friend Michael Sadleir
. Jameson, Storm. Journey from the North. Harper and Row, 1970. 188 |
Publishing | Oscar Wilde | According to bibliographer Michael Sadleir
, OW
's earliest publication was a Chorus of Cloud Maidens which appeared in the Dublin University Magazine. Sadleir, Michael. “Dublin University Magazine: Its History, Contents and Bibliography”. The Bibliographical Society of Ireland, 1938, pp. 59-81. 79 |
Publishing | Eleanor Sleath | This book was written during a highly social period of ES
's life, and advertised in February 1799. Czlapinski, Rebecca, and Eric C. Wheeler. Sleath Sleuth. New Eleanor Sleath Biography. 8 May 2011, http://sleathsleuth.wordpress.com/2011/05/08/new-eleanor-sleath-biography/. Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press, 2000, 2 vols. 1: 761 |
Publishing | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | Its circulation was enormous. In its three-volume form it went through eight issues in its first three months, although reviewers implied that early announcements of these new editions were a form of puffery. Bibliographer Michael Sadleir |
Publishing | Storm Jameson | This had been rejected by such publishers as Duckworth
and Fisher Unwin
before it was accepted, with revisions, by Michael Sadleir
at Constable
. Jameson had sent her typescript to Constable under her husband
's... |
Publishing | Storm Jameson | |
Reception | Eliza Parsons | The Critical Review judged this a novel not one of the first order, or even of the second, and its characters too darkly tinted. The two plots were not sufficiently connected and the language had... |
Reception | Mary Ann Browne | Regrettably, bibliographer Michael Sadleir
makes no mention of MAB
in his piece on the Dublin University Magazine, 1838. Sadleir, Michael. “Dublin University Magazine: Its History, Contents and Bibliography”. The Bibliographical Society of Ireland, 1938, pp. 59-81. |
Textual Production | Ellen Wood | Ten years after her death, EW
's Ashley, and Other Stories was published; the other stories were, like the title tale, drawn from The Argosy. Ashley was serialised in volume 53 of The Argosy... |
Textual Production | John Strange Winter | In over a hundred novels, JSW
addressed a diverse range of subjects and genres. She continued to write throughout her career the tales of military life which were her first productions: her further titles in... |
Textual Production | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | MEB
completed the penny parts of her first novel, Three Times Dead; or, The Secret of the Heath, in the ground-breaking genre of the detective novel. Begun in February of this year, it was... |
Textual Production | Vita Sackville-West | |
Textual Production | Sarah Stickney Ellis | SSE
, as Mrs Ellis, dated the preface to her second advice book, The Daughters of England: Their Position in Society, Character and Responsibilities. Bibliographer Michael Sadleir
, however, records a different... |
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