Apologies for disappearing
for quite a bit longer than I intended between posts. It's been a busy couple
of weeks (though one rife with some good reading, which I shall have to report
on soon).
It's not often that one of my
authors is a ghost (at least that I know of, although I wouldn't mind a ghostly
visit from Stella Gibbons or Rumer Godden, if they were of a mind to have some
tea and a chat late one night), but anyone who lives in or near South
Derbyshire might be interested to know that Minnie Elisabeth Farmer, who
published a single novel as ELIZABETH
HARRINGTON, is best known as the ghost who occasionally appears in the
wooded area surrounding the White Lady Springs Reservoir near Castle Gresley.
Sadly, she drowned herself in the reservoice in 1925, and it is believed that
her apparition has given the reservoir its name. You can read about her ghost here,
among other places. Farmer was the author of Paul Raymond, Revolutionist (1921), which was dedicated to the
"children of the underworld," but about which little other
information is available. According to newspaper coverage of her death, she was
a former schoolmistress and had attended conferences abroad with the Women's
International League.
O. SHAKESPEAR's
six novels are described by OCEF as
"of the marriage problem class," which doesn't make me tingle with
anticipation, but on the other hand, apparently she and poet William Butler
Yeats had an affair in 1896 and considered eloping together, which makes her a
bit more intriguing to me. Valancourt Books has reprinted an additional novel,
which was serialized but never before published in book form, Beauty's Hour (1896) (see here).
I'm also not terribly excited
about the four romantic novels written by ANNE
MACGILLIVRAY—Isle of Youth
(1957), The Pool of Light (1960), Stairway to Happiness (1962), The Deep Intent (1964)—but it was rather
fun trying to identify her. John Herrington was finally able to confirm that
she was the Yorkshire-born wife of Angus MacGillivray, head of the MacGillivray
clan.
Crail, Fife |
They lived in Crail, Fife, which looks like it belongs on my next
Scotland itinerary, and also, coincidentally, was the setting of D. E.
Stevenson's Spring Magic, which I
just happened to be reading at the same time we were researching
MacGillivray—what were the chances? [Wrong, wrong, wrong! See comments below. D'oh!] MacGillivray seems to have begun writing
only in her seventies.
DOROTHEA DEAKIN's
seven novels were described by OCEF
as "fairly tedious comedies of village or country house life," but contemporary
critics referred to her work as "frothy," "thoroughly
amusing," and "freshly and brightly written," so they could
clearly go either way. Add to that that she was the niece of none other than E.
Nesbit, and one might consider sampling her work. The novels' titles are The Smile of Melinda (1903), The Poet and the Pierrot (1905), 'Georgie' (1906), The Princess and the Kitchen Maid (1906), The Young Columbine (1908), Tormentilla
(1908), and The Goddess Girl (1910).
She also published a considerable amount of periodical fiction. She died in 1924
in a clinic in Lugano, Switzerland, which might suggest tuberculosis. She had
married in 1910, perhaps not coincidentally the date of her final novel.
Since I've been doing
research for this blog, I've discovered that a lot of writers have written books either rewriting, continuing, or
completing works by Jane Austen. Some are better than others, no doubt, and some
more faithful to Austen's style. Judged by such criteria, surely ALICE COBBETT's Somehow Lengthened (1932), a completion of Austen's unfinished
novel Sanditon, is on the lower end
of the spectrum. Blogger Deborah Yaffe
wrote about it here,
noting that Cobbett's version of Austen's story includes "a Caribbean love
potion, a kidnapping, a near race riot, a blindfold nighttime journey over
rough terrain, a smuggling gang, a dying prostitute, and a filthy-rich countess
with a philanthropic bent" but also concluding that it's "quite a lot
of fun." Cobbett wrote one additional novel, A Tale of Treasons (1937), about which information is lacking. She
was the daughter of a well-known Victorian sports journalist, Martin Cobbett.
MARY WALL
also wrote only two novels, which are similarly replete with plot. A Writing-Woman's Romance (1908) deals
with the "love-story of the sub-editor of a provincial temperance journal
and the manager of a wholesale whisky business," but that's nothing
compared to Back to the World (1916).
The Month notes that the latter
"treats with much psychological insight of the sensations of a discharged
lunatic, rendered insane in childbirth by the callousness of an unsympathetic
husband, and 'put away' for the space of twenty years." I imagine many of
you will rush to your favorite online bookseller to search for those plum
titles! Wall remains unidentified, but she also published one volume of poetry,
The Millionaire and Other Poems
(1913), and John Herrington found a review that suggests she may have been
Irish.
Descending a bit further into
melodrama, we come across JUANITA SAVAGE,
the unidentified author of eight romantic novels with titles like Spanish Love (1924), The City of Desire (1926), Passion Island (1927), Bandit Love (1931), and Spanish Rapture (1934). The City of Desire incorporates elements
of sci-fi as it's heroine discovers a lost civilization (as well as true love).
John Herrington was unable to trace her in public records, though there is just
a slight possibility that Savage could have been a pseudonym of Amy GILMOUR,
whose work was similar in style and whom one source suggested was more prolific
and successful than her one known title.
Surely one of the most inexplicable of transatlantic retitlings: the UK edition... |
...and the American edition |
EVELYN ANTHONY
published nearly three dozen volumes of historical fiction and romantic
suspense, though she is perhaps best known now for her 1971 novel The Tamarind Seed, made into a film
starring Julie Andrews and Omar Sharif. Her career began with a "Romanov
trilogy" comprised of Imperial
Highness (1953, aka Rebel Princess),
Curse Not the King (1954, aka Royal Intrigue), and Far Flies the Eagle (1955, aka Far Fly the Eagles). Regarding her later
suspense fiction, the St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers noted:
"The action of her plots often involves more romance than intrigue. …
Anthony's lovers in each novel are immediately identifiable to the reader by
the strong and immutable sexual attraction they feel for each other. No matter
how the book ends, the characters have no choice but to be motivated and
controlled by that attraction."
Perhaps Anthony could trace
her literary roots back to Caroline Emily Cameron, who published more than 40
novels under the name MRS LOVETT CAMERON.
OCEF describes her work as
melodramatic, but goes on: "Her practice is to titillate the reader by
approaching sexual sin and tragedy and then retreating to romance." One of
her most successful works was In a Grass
Country (1885). Her brother-in-law, Verney Lovett Cameron, was the author
of adventure stories for boys.
Despite having published only
six novels over the course of 20 years, DORIS
SUTCLIFFE ADAMS seems to have some loyal fans, judging from my online
searches for information about her. Her first four appeared under her own name,
the last two under her pseudonym, Grace Ingram. Desert Leopard (1958) and No
Man's Son (1961) are set in the time of the Crusades, The Price of Blood (1962) in the days of Viking attacks on England,
and Power of Darkness (1967) during
the reign of King John. The two novels as Grace Ingram—Red Adam's Lady (1973) and Gilded
Spurs (1978)—perhaps have a bit more of a romantic focus.
Similarly historical in theme
are the seven novels by the unidentified E.
YOLLAND. Her debut, In Days of Strife
(1896), is subtitled "Fragments of fact and fiction from a Refugee's
history in France, 1666 to 1685." A bookseller describes Sarolta's Verdict (1899) as a
"Gothic novel set among Hungarian gypsies." And her final novel, The Struggle for the Crown: A Romance of the
Seventeenth Century (1912), is apparently aimed at young women and is
narrated by a lady-in-waiting to Elizabeth of Bohemia, the "Winter
Queen." The others are Mistress
Bridget (1898), Vanity's Price
(1900), The Monk's Shadow (1902), and
Under the Stars (1907).
One critic referred to FRANCES MUNDY-CASTLE's The Chemist's Wife (1940, published
under her pseudonym Peggy Whitehouse) as "Madame Bovary in a different
key". Not terribly revealing, but details of her other seven novels are entirely
lacking. She has also been identified as the author of A Democrat's Chapbook (1942), published under the name "Quiet
Woman," which was subtitled "a chronicle of some of the events of the
present war, up to the entry of America, December 1941, with reflections."
The remaining five authors
from my recent update include KITTY
LESSELLS, who wrote ten romantic novels in the 1940s and 1950s, as well as
four authors whose work mostly appeared before my time period but who just
squeak onto the list with a final title or two after 1910.
JESSIE CHALLACOMBE published nearly a dozen works of fiction, at least some for children
and all published by Christian-oriented publishers. Her non-fiction Jottings from a Farnborough Note Book
(1922) was reprinted in 1980 with the subtitle "a story of an old world
village".
GERALDINE EMMA HODGSON was a biographer and author of non-fiction on topics
ranging from Christian saints and histories of education to a teacher's guide
to Montaigne. She also published at least four novels, as well as one later
work, Across the Forest and Far Away
(1911), which appears to be children's fiction and thus qualifies her for my
list.
KATHERINE S. MACQUOID was a travel writer and author of more than 50
volumes of fiction, most romantic in theme. Some of her best-known novels are A Bad Beginning: a Story of a French
Marriage (1862), Patty (1871), At the Red Glove (1885), "a
romantic comedy set in a penson in Bern" (ODNB), and Captain Dallington
(1907), about a highwayman. Her final novel, Molly Montague's Love Story (1911), qualifies her for this list.
RED ADAM'S LADY has just been reprinted in the US by the Chicago Review Press. I read it years ago and loved it then. I know it's highly regarded by historical novelist Elizabeth Chadwick, among others. I have a copy of the reissue on order and am looking forward to reading it again, forty-odd years later.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dean! It's great to know that one is available again.
DeleteNaturally, I honed right in on Juanita Savage, especially Don Lorenzo's Bride. Lord have mercy, what does this say about me? But I adore these pulp-type covers! Love it! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteTom
I love tawdry covers too, Tom. Not sure about actually reading the books, but the covers are fun.
DeleteActually, I looked it up some more - some of these titles by Miss Savage are available with the tawdry covers - hmmmm - would this make an interesting art project? Tom
DeleteI hope you enjoyed Spring Magic. I love that book. But I thought it was located on the opposite coast of Scotland from Fife, one of the crooked peninsulas on the western coast, south of Skye. I will have to read it again to check!
ReplyDeleteAnd, as always, some interesting sounding books and lovely cover art. Modern dust covers are seldom as interesting.
Jerri
Oh, Jerri, I am an idiot. I thought it was quite a coincidence, but somehow I equated Cairn and Crail. Cairn appears to be a fictional place, while Crail, though it looks delightful, is obviously not what DES had in mind. D'oh!
DeleteGosh, you HAVE been busy, Scott. Such a wealth of information and images, I'll have to confine myself to a few comments.
ReplyDeleteFirst, as Jerri says, I'm pretty sure Cairn, in Spring Magic, is on the west coast of Scotland. (For instance, Frances has the west room at the inn, which looks out onto the sea glistening in the late afternoon sunshine, with a far away view of a misty island.) I thought it might be Kirkcudbright (because artists), but that looks south, not west.
But Jerri -- oh the hardship -- by all means read it again. To check. :^)
Mea culpa, Susan. See my response to Jerri above. My brain is clearly fried.
DeleteNext...Juanita Savage. Could it have been her real name? Oh, but just look at that.... The Spaniard - a romance of Spanish Love (a masterpiece of needless redundancy). And, oh my dear, Don Lorenzo's Bride. That cover! That blurb! But here's a totally different take: http://www.ladybluestocking.com/List%20of%20Jackets/njv/ur/Don-Lorenzo's-Bride-ur.jpg Surely not the same couple?
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link to the other cover, Susan. Slightly more tasteful than the paperback version (and I just noticed the eye at the keyhole on the front of the paperback--rather a shady symbol for an imprint to have!).
DeleteThe Eye on those wonderfully delicious Dell pulp covers indicates a Map Back edition. Scene of the Crime (or whatever) on the back. Go ahead. Google it. Hours of fun for the whole family.
DeleteAnd then....the ghost writer. Some pretty wispy evidence, but, well, it might be true.
ReplyDelete