Newman, Jenny. “Michèle Roberts”. Contemporary British and Irish Fiction, edited by Sharon Monteith et al., Arnold, 2004, pp. 119-34.
131-2
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Dedications | Michèle Roberts | The title story is dedicated to Lorna Sage
, and the volume as a whole to her memory. Various other stories are dedicated to other friends and writers. Some were originally written for radio. Newman, Jenny. “Michèle Roberts”. Contemporary British and Irish Fiction, edited by Sharon Monteith et al., Arnold, 2004, pp. 119-34. 131-2 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Fortune | Indeed, her whole motivation at this time is murky: though she apparently had a work-related reason, she may have been escaping from her marriage. Lorna Sage
, following Lucy Sussex
, suggested that MF
was... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Angela Carter | In Japan AC
had a younger lover, Sozo Araki
, whom she calls Taro after a fictional character known as Momotaro or Peach Boy, who later had some success as a writer himself. Turner, Jenny. “A New Kind of Being”. London Review of Books, Vol. 38 , No. 21, 3 Nov. 2016, pp. 7-14. 11-12 |
Friends, Associates | Christine Brooke-Rose | Muriel Spark
, a very old friend of CBR
, Brooke-Rose, Christine. Invisible Author: Last Essays. Ohio State University Press, 2002. 42 |
Friends, Associates | Angela Carter | Her literary friends included Lorna Sage
and Salman Rushdie
, a fellow campaigner against the Falklands War. Through her contributions to the London Review of Books she formed a friendship with Susannah Clapp
, an... |
Health | Angela Carter | AC
said that she was a ravaged anorexic during her ludicrously overprotected adolescence. Carter, Angela. Shaking a Leg: Journalism and Writings: Angela Carter. 1st ed., Chatto and Windus, 1997. 22 |
Health | Angela Carter | Carter had not planned to get pregnant but intended to go ahead. Gamble, Sarah. Angela Carter. A Literary Life. Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. 177 |
Literary responses | Elaine Feinstein | Lorna Sage
in the Times Literary Supplement used the word obsessed about Feinstein's interest in the persistence of the past in her characters' lives. . . . The last war, the holocaust, the webs of... |
Literary responses | E. Owens Blackburne | In the same preface EOB
promises to include some previously unpublished poems by William Wordsworth
, apparently in connection with the Ladies of Llangollen. Between the publication of the two volumes, however, Wordsworth's son forbade... |
Literary responses | Christine Brooke-Rose | Lorna Sage
in The Observer described Amalgamemnon as an elegant, rueful and witty word-game about what it feels like to be a word-addict—worse, a writing addict. qtd. in “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. |
Literary responses | Marina Warner | Reviews, including those by Lorna Sage
in the Times Literary Supplement, Ann Cornelisen
in the New York Times Book Review, and Michiko Kakutani
in the New York Times, were generally positive. They... |
Literary responses | Christine Brooke-Rose | Lorna Sage
hailed this novel as science fiction of the subversive sort. qtd. in “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. |
Literary responses | Germaine Greer | A female gynaecologist mentioned in the book as uncaring and insensitive successfully sued Greer for damages. Wallace, Christine. Germaine Greer: Untamed Shrew. Richard Cohen Books, 1999. 265-6 |
Literary responses | Angela Carter | Anthony Burgess
praised AC
for doing something in this novel which she did in later ones as well: looking at the mess of contemporary life without flinching. Lee, Alison. Angela Carter. Twayne, 1997. 23 |
Literary responses | Patricia Highsmith | Despite positive reviews by Lorna Sage
in The Observer Review and Geoffrey Elborn
in Guardian Weekly, Brooks Peters
in Out says that the novel was not well received in England. However, the year... |