2255 results Periodical publication

Emma Marshall

Throughout these years, from 1868, as well as later, EM was writing for periodicals. She was a regular in Home Words and Fireside News, both edited by the Rev. Charles Bullock .
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
In 1895 she mentioned contributions to Friendly Leaves, the Sunday Magazine, and the The Boys' and Girls' Companion for Leisure Hours.
Marshall, Beatrice. Emma Marshall. Seeley, 1900.
288

Helen Mathers, 1851 - 1920

HM 's first publication was a short story in Belgravia. If the date is accurate she was about twenty.
Black, Helen C. Notable Women Authors of the Day. D. Bryce, 1893.
74

Susan Miles

Before her first volume appeared, SM was placing poetry in periodicals like the New Statesman and suffragist papers.
Miles, Susan. “Publisher’s Note”. Lettice Delmer, Persephone Books, 2002, p. v - xii.
vii

Nancy Mitford

NM 's novels were the logical next step from her earliest literary efforts: social columns and short stories published in Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, the Tatler, and The Lady. The money she earned from these pieces—in March 1929 she reported having earned £22 in the last three months—helped to finance her social life. She continued to draw on her experiences in the social circles of London's high society in her first two novels. After her marriage to Peter Rodd in 1933, her writing provided a significant share of the household income.
Mitford, Nancy. “Critical Materials”. Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford, edited by Charlotte Mosley, Hodder and Stoughton, 1993, p. various pages.
14
Hastings, Selina. Nancy Mitford: A Biography. Hamish Hamilton, 1985.
69, 71-2, 74, 90, 99

Anne Mozley

AM began reviewing books in 1847 for the high-church Christian Remembrancer (of which her brother James Bowling Mozley was editor). Her contributions continued until the magazine closed in 1868, by which time she had extended her field to include writing, still anonymously, for Bentley's Quarterly (1859-60), the Saturday Review (1861-77), and Blackwood's Magazine (from 1865).
Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder, 1908–2025, 22 vols. plus supplements.
Wordsworth, John, Bishop of Salisbury, and Anne Mozley. “Memoir”. Essays from "Blackwood", edited by F. Mozley and F. Mozley, William Blackwood and Sons, 1892, p. xii - xx.
x-xi

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin

ENC issued with the Gallery PressThe Sun-fish, a collection of poems, some new and some previously published in magazines or journals such as Cyphers and the Irish University Review.
Ní Chuilleanáin, Eiléan. The Sun-fish. Gallery Books, 2010.
61

Kate O'Brien

One of KOB 's professors at University College encouraged her to write poetry, but both she and her friends knew that the poetry she wrote was no good.
Reynolds, Lorna. Kate O’Brien: A Literary Portrait. Colin Smythe; Barnes and Noble, 1987.
35
She began contributing short stories and essays to periodicals while she was working as a journalist and later as an editor in London.
Shattock, Joanne. The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers. Oxford University Press, 1993.

Sarah Flower Adams

SFA contributed poetry, drama, short stories and essays to the Monthly Repository: she began as Sarah Flower, before her marriage.
Armstrong, Isobel et al., editors. Nineteenth-Century Women Poets. Clarendon Press, 1996.
Thesing, William B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 199. Gale Research, 1999.
199: 3, 5

Grace Aguilar

Between 1839 and May 1846, Isaac Leeser 's The Occident, and American Jewish Advocate, published from Philadelphia, printed twenty-seven poems by GA , as well as some prose extracts.

Louisa May Alcott

LMA began writing while she was very young. At the age of ten she began a journal which was soon afterwards read and commented on by her mother . She was also a regular contributor to the family periodical. Her first published work appeared in September 1851 in Peterson's Magazine, a poem titled Sunlight. The following spring, her storyThe Rival Painters was published in the Olive Branch.Her first novel, The Inheritance, was never published during her life but reveals Charlotte Brontë 's influence on her writings.Christine Doyle has produced a book-length study on the connection between the two writers, Louisa May Alcott and Charlotte Brontë: Transatlantic Translations.
Stern, Madeleine B., and Louisa May Alcott. “Introduction”. The Journals of Louisa May Alcott, edited by Joel Myerson et al., Little, Brown, 1989, pp. 3-39.
4-6
Doyle, Christine. Louisa May Alcott and Charlotte Brontë: Transatlantic Translations. University of Knoxville Press, 2000.
xxiii-xxiv, 31-2
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
239

Cecil Frances Alexander

CFA contributed pieces to the collection Lyra Anglicana: Hymns and Sacred Songs (which, edited by Robert Hall Baynes and published in 1862, reached sales of thirty thousand within three years and sixty-nine thousand by 1879). She wrote for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge , as well as several other religious journals and hymnals.
Solo: Search Oxford University Libraries Online. 18 July 2011, http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?vid=OXVU1&fromLogin=true&reset_config=true.
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Julian, John, editor. A Dictionary of Hymnology. Dover Publications, 1957, 2 vols.

Anna Livia

Anna Livia has published her short stories in such periodicals as Spinster, Sinister Wisdom, Lesbian Ethics, and Girljock. She has also included her fiction in anthologies edited by Lilian Mohin , Julia Penelope , Judith Barrington , and Susan Fox Rogers , among others. Under the pseudonym Faustina Rey, she contributed a story called The Truth to the 1995 collection Queer View Mirror, and Lynda Hall included her Dostoyevsky would have liked that in Telling Moments: autobiographical lesbian short stories, 2003.
Malinowski, Sharon et al., editors. Gay and Lesbian Literature. St James Press, 1994–1998, 2 vols.
2: 227
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.

Pat Arrowsmith

PA kept a very detailed diary between the ages of thirteen and fifteen. She published excerpts and illustrations from it, with passages from her two juvenile novels, in I Should Have Been a Hornby Train, retaining the faulty grammar and misspellings..
Arrowsmith, Pat. I Should Have Been a Hornby Train. Heretic Books, 1995.
7
At Cheltenham Ladies' College she wrote sonnets in Shakespeare an style to a girl she was in love with,
Arrowsmith, Pat. I Should Have Been a Hornby Train. Heretic Books, 1995.
138-9
as well as comic and mock-heroic poems, religious and political poems, conventional nature poems, including a couple of poor imitations of Rupert Brook[e] ,
Arrowsmith, Pat. I Should Have Been a Hornby Train. Heretic Books, 1995.
173
a pantomime, and several plays, one of them in French. Two of her poems (not the irreverent mock-heroic) were printed in the college magazine, and her dramatic skit was performed at school in summer 1947.
Arrowsmith, Pat. I Should Have Been a Hornby Train. Heretic Books, 1995.
173-4
She sent the Archbishop of Canterbury a copy of a poem written on VE (Victory in Europe) Day, and had quite an appreciative letter back, though this did not, as she had hoped, lead to publication.
Arrowsmith, Pat. I Should Have Been a Hornby Train. Heretic Books, 1995.
220

Margaret Atwood

While writer-in-residence at the English Department of the University of Alberta , MA contributed to the department's short-lived periodical called The Merry Devil of Edmonton, 1969-71. Other contributors included Bert Almon , Douglas Barbour , Earle Birney , Elizabeth Brewster , Dorothy Livesay , b. p. Nichol , and Stephen Scobie . Atwood and Bill Bissett provided illustrations.
University of Alberta Libraries On-line Catalogue. http://www.library.ualberta.ca/.

Rudy M. Ayres

Her first tangible success was winning first prize (a guinea) in a school story competition held by the Boy's Own Paper (which she submitted, to conform to expectations, under the name of one of her brothers).
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.

Mary Bailey

MB published over eighty poems in the Colonial Times of Hobart in Tasmania, which was the colony's leading newspaper at the time.
Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990.

Louisa Baldwin

The original edition of nine stories was illustrated by J. Ayton Symington .
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
A new, limited edition (500 copies) from Ash-Tree Press of Ashcroft, British Columbia, 2001 (edited by John Pelan and Richard Dalby , and not the first new edition of recent times), reproduces these illustrations along with the original stories and one, The Ticking of the Clock, previously uncollected. Some of the stories had previously appeared in such periodicals as Longman's Magazine, Cornhill, and The Argosy.
Baldwin, Louisa. The Shadow on the Blind, and Other Ghost Stories. J. M. Dent, 1895.
prelims
Baldwin dedicated this work to her nephew Rudyard Kipling , to whom she occasionally sent drafts of her writings for his opinion.
Baldwin, Louisa. The Shadow on the Blind, and Other Ghost Stories. J. M. Dent, 1895.
prelims
Baldwin, Arthur Windham, third Earl. The Macdonald Sisters. Peter Davies, 1961.
197

Mary Barber

Several of her poems appeared in periodicals (including the Gentleman's Magazine) and miscellanies in the years before her collected volume, but none of them with her name. Stella and Flavia appeared in three miscellanies and a newspaper, but its attribution to MB is doubtful.
Budd, Adam. “’Merit in Distress’: The Troubled Success of Mary Barber”. Review of English Studies, Vol.
53
, May 2002, pp. 204-27.
207-8, 219, n11

Natalie Clifford Barney

Remy de Gourmont published some of NCB 's poems in Mercure de France in 1910.
Wickes, George. The Amazon of Letters: The Life and Loves of Natalie Barney. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1976.
121
In 1921 Pound had two of her poems published in the transatlantic review, with the caption Arranged by Ezra Pound .
Sieburth, Richard. “Ezra Pound: Letters to Natalie Barney”. Paideuma: A Journal Devoted to Ezra Pound Scholarship, Vol.
5
, 1976, pp. 279-95.
283
A few poems are also included in NCB 's collection of letters to and about Dolly Wilde , In Memory of Dorothy Ierne Wilde, privately printed at Dijon in 1951.
Elliott, Bridget, and Jo-Ann Wallace. Women Artists and Writers: Modernist (im)positionings. Routledge, 1994.
33
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.

Sir J. M. Barrie

James Matthew Barrie 's first book appeared: Auld Licht Idylls, a collection of short stories previously issued in periodicals.
Cox, Michael, editor. The Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press, 2002, 2 vols.
Parker, Peter, editor. A Reader’s Guide to Twentieth-Century Writers. Oxford University Press, 1996.
55

Sybille Bedford

SB worked at many journalistic jobsover the course of her career. She spent a full six months as assistant consultant on an encyclopedic volume on wine.
Bedford, Sybille. Jigsaw. Penguin, 1999.
x
She also wrote on food, and on literature in many genres. She worked at travel journalism, which fed my desire to see and to learn and helped to finance my slow books.
Bedford, Sybille. Jigsaw. Penguin, 1999.
x
For The Times she supplied a polemical piece about the need for government policy on population control, and an obituary on Fay Blacket Gill , one of England's earliest women solicitors.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
(17 December 1975): 14; (25 September 1980): 18
Her articles on literature, food and wine, travel and law, appeared in the Times Literary Supplement, Observer, The Spectator, Vogue, Encounter, Horizon, the New Yorker, Saturday Evening Post, and many other periodicals. Some of these, like The Quality of Travel, 1961, are reprinted in As It Was: Pleasures, Landscapes and Justice, 1990.
Petro, Pamela. “A traveler’s tales”. Women’s Review of Books, Vol.
xx
, No. 10-11, July 2003, p. 35.
35
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.

Eva Mary Bell

In 1920 EMB was listed as a regular contributor to the Woman's Supplement of The Times.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
42568 (15 November 1920): 14
On 31 October 1929, in the continuing aftermath of Katherine Mayo 's book Mother India, Bell wrote to The Times to disagree with Eleanor Rathbone (very respectfully: Rathbone's reputation for fair play and sincerity needs no defence from me) and to urge unity and co-operation among those working for the betterment of Indian women.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
45348 (31 October 1929): 10
When suffrage for some but not all Indian women was being discussed, she wrote again to argue that widows of soldiers killed on active service certainly deserved the vote.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
46304 (30 November 1932): 8
Having written repeatedly to The Times on the issue of Indian women's education, she went on to send a short note about counting one's blessings during the second world war, and a strong objection (following the lead of Phyllis Deakin ) to the way the War Injuries Compensation Scheme doled out more money for an injured man than an injured woman. This form of the broader practice of unequal pay, EMB argued, was indefensible since medical services charged no less for women patients; single women often have dependent parents; disabled men are frequently able (as women are not) to secure the services of a wife; and the humanity common to both sexes has a right to relief.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
48835 (28 January 1941): 5

Arnold Bennett

Having begun as a journalist, AB remained one until the end of his career. In New York at the end of 1911, he sold essays and serials to periodicals ther..
Drabble, Margaret. Arnold Bennett. Knopf, 1974.
186-7
During the first world war, he wrote a series of articles on war (which ran nearly the whole duration of the conflict) for the Daily News. Because of these articles, the LiberalCabinet summoned him to London for political consultation, and by 1915 he had worked as a front-line government propagandist in France, describing conditions at the Front.
Drabble, Margaret. Arnold Bennett. Knopf, 1974.
211-12, 218
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
During the last year of the first world war Bennett was a prolific contributor to newspapers. In the years after the war, his contributions to journals and magazines steeply dropped off, but they began to pick up again after he met Dorothy Cheston in 1922.
Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 34. Gale Research, 1985.
25

Stella Benson

SB began contributing to the children's pages of the journal St Nicholas.
Bedell, R. Meredith. Stella Benson. Twayne, 1983.
2

Theodora Benson

Country Life carried TB 's article A House to Remember, about Stowe House at Lichfield, Staffordshire, where she grew up.
“Stowe House”. Institute of Leadership and Management (ILM).