F. Tennyson Jesse

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Standard Name: Jesse, F. Tennyson
Birth Name: Wynifried Margaret Jesse
Self-constructed Name: Fryniwyd Tennyson Jesse
Pseudonym: Beamish Tinker
Pseudonym: F. Tennyson Jesse
Nickname: Fryn
FTJ , one of the few women journalists to report from the Front in the First World War, also published in a wide range of genres.
Reilly, Catherine, editor. The Virago Book of Women’ War Poetry and Verse. Virago, 1997.
288
She wrote seven plays of her own and collaborated on additional plays with her husband. She also published nine novels, three collections of short stories, two volumes of poetry, two collections of letters, a translation from French, and a history of Burma. As writer of crime and detective fiction, she also produced a book of criminology and edited and introduced six volumes in the Notable British Trials series.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Rumer Godden
Though RG 's father had warned that no-one would read a book about nuns, it reached third place in the best-seller charts. By 1987 it had never been out of print.
Godden, Rumer. A Time to Dance, No Time to Weep. Macmillan, 1987.
129
Rights were sold...
Publishing E. M. Delafield
She originally titled the book Equipment, but on the advice of F. Tennyson Jesse (a reader for her publisher, Heinemann ), the title was changed. EMD had wanted a pseudonym to distinguish herself from...
Textual Features Norah Lofts
Marion Draper, NL 's middle-class heroine, is a fictionalized Madeleine Smith (who had already been the subject of a topical novel, by Emma Robinson in early 1864, and of a non-fictional study by F. Tennyson Jesse
Textual Features Lucas Malet
This novel takes up the story abruptly ended in The Dogs of Want. Sir Robert Syme, recently appointed a judge, has also not long ago become the husband of that novel's protagonist Barbara Heritage...
Textual Features A. S. Byatt
Together, says Byatt, the stories make up one exploration of Victorian anxieties about what it was to be human.
qtd. in
Byatt, A. S. A. S. Byatt. http://www.asbyatt.com/.
The Conjugial Angel (whose odd spelling of conjugal derives from Emanuel Swedenborg ) relates the story...
Textual Production E. M. Delafield
Contemporary newspapers were filled with sensationalized stories of the trial and execution of Edith Thompson and her lover Frederick Bywaters for the murder of Thompson's husband.
McCullen, Maurice. E. M. Delafield. Twayne, 1985.
31
This case inspired several novels other than Messalina...

Timeline

22 March 1857: The death by arsenic poisoning of her lover,...

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22 March 1857

The death by arsenic poisoning of her lover, shipping clerk Emile L'Angelier , led to the prominent trial for murder of Madeleine Smith , daughter of an affluent Glasgow architect.
Hartman, Mary S. Victorian Murderesses. Schocken Books, 1977.
52-4, 82-3

6-11 December 1922: Edith Thompson and her younger lover Frederick...

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6-11 December 1922

Edith Thompson and her younger lover Frederick Bywaters were tried for the murder of her husband, Percy Thompson .
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.

9 March 1950: Timothy Evans, a van-driver in his early...

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9 March 1950

Timothy Evans , a van-driver in his early twenties, was hanged for the murders of his wife and baby daughter, who were more likely killed by the family's landlord, John Reginald Halliday Christie .
“Timonthy Evans and John Christie”. Stephen’s Study Room: British Military & Criminal History in the period 1900 to 1999.

Texts

Jesse, F. Tennyson. A Pin to See the Peepshow. W. Heinemann , 1934.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Anyhouse. W. Heinemann, 1925.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Beggars on Horseback. W. Heinemann, 1915.
Jesse, F. Tennyson, and Harold Marsh Harwood. Billeted. S. French, 1920.
Morgan, Elaine, and F. Tennyson Jesse. “Introduction”. A Pin to See the Peep Show, Virago, 1979.
Jesse, F. Tennyson, and Harold Marsh Harwood. London Front. Constable, 1940.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Moonraker. W. Heinemann, 1927.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Murder & its Motives. W. Heinemann, 1924.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Sabi Pas. W. Heinemann, 1935.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Secret Bread. W. Heinemann, 1917.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Alabaster Cup. Evans Brothers, 1950.
Wren, Lassiter, and Randle McKay. The Baffle Book. Editor Jesse, F. Tennyson, W. Heinemann, 1930.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Compass, and Other Poems. William Hodge , 1951.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Dragon in the Heart. Constable, 1956.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Happy Bride. W. Heinemann, 1920.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Lacquer Lady. W. Heinemann, 1929.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Milky Way. W. Heinemann, 1913.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Saga of "San Demetrio". His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1942.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Solange Stories. W. Heinemann, 1931.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Story of Burma. Macmillan, 1946.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The Sword of Deborah. R. Clay, 1918.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. The White Riband. W. Heinemann, 1921.
Jesse, F. Tennyson. Tom Fool. W. Heinemann, 1926.
Smith, Madeleine. Trial of Madeleine Smith. Editor Jesse, F. Tennyson, W. Hodge, 1927.