Black, Helen C. Notable Women Authors of the Day. D. Bryce, 1893.
267
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Occupation | B. M. Croker | BMC
's accepted status as a writer is marked both by her membership of the Writers' Club
and the Sesame Club
, and by the visit at Bray in 1896 from Helen Black
, to... |
Publishing | Matilda Charlotte Houstoun | The 1880s marked the beginning of MCH
's relationship with publisher F. V. White
. Houstoun informed Helen C. Black
, who was interviewing her for a book, that He stands high amongst the publishers... |
Reception | Matilda Charlotte Houstoun | In an interview with Helen C. BlackMCH
reflected that out of all of her books I look back with thankfulness to my novelette, entitled Only a Woman's Life, the writing of which was... |
Reception | Jean Middlemass | In the opinion of biographer Helen C. Black
, the chief merit of this work is its animated dialogue. Black, Helen C. Notable Women Authors of the Day. D. Bryce, 1893. 267 |
Reception | Lucy Walford | |
Reception | Mrs Alexander | Early critic Helen Black
found Her Dearest Foe to be quite absorbing. Black, Helen C. Notable Women Authors of the Day. D. Bryce, 1893. 64 |
Reception | Annie S. Swan | |
Reception | Charlotte Riddell | Geraldine Jewsbury
reviewed this novel too for the Athenæum the year after publication, and she found it excellent . . . powerfully and carefully written, far superior to CR
's work heretofore. Athenæum. J. Lection. 1947 (1865): 233 |
Reception | Mary Anne Duffus Hardy | This was the earliest of her novels that she mentioned to Helen Black
, as if she felt it was in a different category from her earlier efforts. Black, Helen C. Notable Women Authors of the Day. D. Bryce, 1893. 201 |
Residence | Jean Middlemass | For much of her adult life JM
lived in Brompton Square, London (which, as noted by biographer Helen Black
, has been inhabited by many famous literary and dramatic personalities). Black describes the Middlemass home... |
Residence | Annie S. Swan | Their first house in London was in an unfashionable area: 52 Camden Square. Helen C. Black
, writing up a visit to them, made a good deal of the unexpected charms of this district... |
Residence | Emily Gerard | Following their marriage, EG
and her husband lived at Brzezno in Galicia (once seized by Austria from Poland, called Brzezany by Helen C. Black
; now Berezhany in Ukraine. They later lived in... |
Residence | Matilda Betham-Edwards | She had there a little house at one end of a picturesque terrace. When Helen C. Black
visited her there, her upstairs study was furnished with a Moroccan carpet, pottery from Greece and other countries... |
Residence | Rosa Nouchette Carey | RNC
lived for about thirty-nine years in Hampstead (where, while she was growing up, her family moved from Hackney). She then moved again, south across London to spend nearly twenty years at Putney. Here... |
Residence | L. T. Meade | LTM
lived with her husband at West Dulwich, just south of London, for most of their married life. Helen C. Black
visited her there in a house that reflected their artistic tastes. Black, Helen C. Pen, Pencil, Baton and Mask: Biographical Sketches. Spottiswoode, 1896. 222 |
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