Tuesday, September 30, 2008

William Cleaver Wilkinson

William Cleaver Wilkinson

William Cleaver Wilkinson, D.D. (Westford, Vermont, October 19, 1833 - Chicago, April 25, 1920) was a Baptist preacher, professor of theology, professor of poetry, and literary figure. He popularized the "Three W's and the Five W's". He graduated from the University of Rochester in 1857 and the Rochester Theological Seminary in 1859. After his graduation, he visited Great Britain and on his return in November 1859, he became pastor of the Wooster Place Baptist church in New Haven, Connecticut. On account of ill health, he resigned his pastorate in 1861 and took a walking tour of England. On his return in 1863, he became professor ad interim of modern languages in the University of Rochester. Not long after he accepted the pastorate of the Mount Auburn Baptist church in Cincinnati, Ohio. Resigning this pastorate in 1866, he opened a private school at Tarrytown, New York. In 1872, he was elected professor of homiletics and pastoral theology at Rochester Theological Seminary, a position which he filled with marked ability until 1882 when he resigned. After that, he devoted himself entirely to literary work. In 1871, he was offered the chair of the German language and literature at the University of Michigan and that of English literature in 1873. In the same year, the University of Rochester conferred upon him the honorary degree of doctor of divinity. His "Dedication Hymn" (published in his Poems) was used at the dedication of Rockefeller Hall at the Rochester Theological Seminary and of the Toronto Baptist College. In 1892, he became a professor of poetry and criticism at the University of Chicago. In 1905, his daughter Evelyn, aged 20, married a 55-year-old man who had divorced his wife; Wilkinson and his wife "denounced their daughter for marrying a man who cast off one wife to wed another". He died on April 25, 1920 as a result of injuries from a fall.



[Classic French Course In English]

Christian Frchtegott Gellert

Christian Frchtegott Gellert (1715-1769)

Christian Frchtegott Gellert (July 4, 1715 - December 13, 1769) was a German poet, one of the forerunners of the golden age of German literature that was ushered in by Lessing.



[C F Gellerts Sammtliche Schriften]

Monday, September 29, 2008

Clare Ann Matz

Clare Ann Matz (1961-now)

Clare Ann Matz (born 1961) is an American multicultural and multimedia performance artist, musician, film director, painter, journalist and writer, who lives and works in Italy.


B Matz's Books:


[The Inns And Taverns Of Pickwick]


Tags: ferno lopes  a quiller couch  harry leon wilson  arthur zagat  alvar nez cabeza de vaca  gerald page  edwin carlile litsey  edmond hamilton  henry lawson  

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Franois Victor Alphonse Aulard

Franois Victor Alphonse Aulard (1849-1928)

Franois Victor Alphonse Aulard (19 July 1849 23 October 1928) was a French historian of the French Revolution and Napoleon. He was born at Montbron in Charente. He entered the cole Normale Suprieure in 1867 and obtained the degree of doctor of letters in 1877 with a Latin thesis on Gaius Asinius Pollio and a French one on Giacomo Leopardi (whose works he subsequently translated into French He made a study of parliamentary oratory during the French Revolution, and published two volumes on Les orateurs de la Constituante and on Les orateurs de la Legislative et de la Convention. With these works, which were reprinted in 1905, he entered a new field, where he soon came an acknowledged master. Applying to the study of the French Revolution the rules of historical criticism which had produced such rich results in the study of ancient and medieval history, he devoted himself to profound research in the archives, and to the publication of numerous important contributions to the political, administrative and moral history of that period. Appointed professor of the history of the French Revolution at the Sorbonne in 1885, he formed the minds of students who in their turn did valuable work. To him we owe the Recueil des actes du Comit de salut public; La Socit des Jacobins:Recueil de documents sur l'histoire des club des Jacobins de Paris; Paris pendant la reaction thermidorienne et sous le directoire: Recueil de documents pour l'histoire de l'esprit public a Paris, which was followed by a collection on Paris sous le consulat. For the Socit de l'Histoire de la Revolution Franaise, which brought under his editorship the important periodical entitled La Revolution franaise. He produced the Registre des librations du consulat provisoire, and L'Etat de la France en l'an VIII et en l'an IX, with the reports of the effects, besides editing various works or memoirs written by men of the Revolution, such as JC Bailleul, Chaumette, Fournier, Hrault de Schelles, and Louvet de Couvrai. These large collections of documents were a fraction of his output. He wrote a Histoire politique de la Revolution franaise, and a number of articles which were collected in volumes under the title Etudes et leons sur la Rvolution franaise. In a volume entitled Taine, historien de la Rvolution franaise, Aulard attacked the method of the eminent philosopher in criticism that was severe, perhaps unjust, but certainly well-informed. This was, as it were, the "manifesto" of the new school of criticism applied to the political and social history of the Revolution.



[Les Grands Orateurs De La Rvolution]


Tags: sir john mandeville  a housman  murray leinster  charles bruce  augustin calmet  nat schachner  j krishnamurti  charles ramsdell lingley  antonio colmenero de ledesma  

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Arthur C Clarke

Arthur C Clarke (1917-2008)

Arthur C Clarke (1917-2008) title=

Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, CBE, FRAS (16 December 1917 19 March 2008) was a British science fiction author, inventor, and futurist, most famous for the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, written in parallel with the script for the eponymous film, co-written with film-director Stanley Kubrick; and as a host and commentator in the British television series Mysterious World. For many years, Robert A. Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke were known as the "Big Three" of science fiction. Clarke served in the Royal Air Force as a radar instructor and technician from 19411946. He proposed a satellite communication system in 1945 which won him the Franklin Institute Stuart Ballantine Gold Medal in 1963. He was the chairman of the British Interplanetary Society from 19471950 and again in 1953. Clarke emigrated to Sri Lanka in 1956 largely to pursue his interest in scuba diving, and lived there until his death. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1998, and was awarded Sri Lanka's highest civil honour, Sri Lankabhimanya, in 2005.



[History Of Company F 1st Regiment R I Volunteers | History Of Company F 1st Regiment R I Volunteers During The Spring And Summer Of 1861]

Friday, September 26, 2008

William Le Queux

William Le Queux (1864-1927)

William Tufnell Le Queux was an Anglo-French journalist and writer. He was also a diplomat (honorary consul for San Marino), a traveller (in Europe, the Balkans and North Africa), a flying buff who officiated at the first British air meeting at Doncaster in 1909, and a wireless pioneer who broadcast music from his own station long before radio was generally available; his claims regarding his own abilities and exploits, however, were usually exaggerated. His best-known works are the anti-German invasion fantasies The Great War in England in 1897 (1894) and The Invasion of 1910 (1906), the latter of which was a phenomenal bestseller.



[Hushed Up | The Czars Spy | The Great White Queen | The Seven Secrets | The Sign Of Silence | The Stretton Street Affair | Bla Kiss | El Tesoro Misterioso | Mademoiselle Of Monte Carlo | Number 70 Berlin | Sant Of The Secret Service | The Count Chauffeur | The Doctor Of Pimlico | The Golden Face | The Intriguers | The Minister Of Evil | The Mysterious Three | The Mystery Of The Green Ray | The Secrets Of Potsdam]


Tags: william vaughn moody  burton hendrick  e lynn linton  charles lever  catherine owen  emilia pardo bazn  edward burbidge  agostinho marques perdigao malheiro  sextus julius frontin  isaac watts  

Monday, September 22, 2008

William Henry Hudson

William Henry Hudson (1841-1922)

William Henry Hudson (1841-1922) title=

William Henry Hudson (4 August 1841 - 18 August 1922) was an author, naturalist, and ornithologist.



[A Crystal Age | The Famous Missions Of California]


Tags: horacio quiroga  drayson adams  vernon williams  david vernon  antonio garca  antonio garca gutirrez  abbott lawrence lowell  antonio garca  hugh walpole  

Akua Lezli Hope

Akua Lezli Hope

Akua Lezli Hope is an African American woman artist, poet and writer. Akua is a third generation New Yorker. She was born in Manhattan and grew up in the South Bronx and Queens. Akua has degrees from Williams College and Columbia University in psychology, journalism and business. Akua is a talented woman with diverse interests including music. She also sings and plays the saxophone.


Eva Hope's Books:


[Grace Darling]

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Benny Andersson

Benny Andersson (1946-now)

Benny Andersson (1946-now) title=

Gran Bror "Benny" Andersson (born in Stockholm, Sweden on 16 December 1946) is a Swedish musician, composer, a former member of the Swedish musical group ABBA (19721982), and co-composer of the musicals Chess, Kristina frn Duvemla, and Mamma Mia!. He is currently active with his own band Benny Anderssons Orkester (BAO!), and was executive producer for the film version of the musical Mamma Mia!.



[David Ramms Arv]

Alfredo Oriani

Alfredo Oriani

Alfredo Oriani (August 22, 1852 - October 18, 1909) was an Italian author, writer and social critic.



[Fino A Dogali | La Disfatta | Olocausto]

Maxine Hong Kingston

Maxine Hong Kingston (1940-now)

Maxine Hong Kingston (1940-now)

Maxine Hong Kingston is a Chinese American author and Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, where she graduated with a BA in English in 1962. Kingston has written three novels and several works of non-fiction about the experiences of Chinese immigrants living in the United States. She has contributed to the feminist movement with such works as her memoir The Woman Warrior, which discusses gender and ethnicity and how these concepts affect the lives of women. Kingston has received several awards for her contributions to Chinese American Literature including the National Book Award in 1981 for her novel China Men.



[Adrift In A Boat | Adventures In Australia | Adventures In The Far West | Afar In The Forest | Alone On An Island | Among The Red Skins | Antony Waymouth | Archibald Hughson The Young Shetlander | Ben Burton | Ben Hadden | Captain Mugford | Charley Laurel | Clara Maynard | Count Ulrich Of Lindburg | Dick Onslow | Exiled For The Faith | Fred Markham In Russia | Happy Jack | In New Granada | In The Rocky Mountains | James Braithwaite The Supercargo | Janet Mclaren | Mary Liddiard | Michael Penguyne | Mountain Moggy | My First Cruise | Ned Garth | Norman Vallery | Owen Hartley Or Ups And Downs | Paul Gerrard | Peter Biddulph | Ralph Clavering | Rob Nixon | Saved From The Sea | The African Trader | The Boy Who Sailed With Blake | The Cruise Of The Dainty | The Cruise Of The Mary Rose | The Ferryman Of Brill | The Frontier Fort | The Gilpins And Their Fortunes | The Grateful Indian | The Heir Of Kilfinnan | The History Of Little Peter The Ship Boy | The Last Look | The Lily Of Leyden | The Log House By The Lake | The Loss Of The Royal George | The Mate Of The Lily | The Mines And Its Wonders | The Perils And Adventures Of Harry Skipwith | The Settlers | The Seven Champions Of Christendom]


Tags: g lytton strachey  franklin adams  george bruce malleson  gabriele dannunzio  eugene jones  elizabeth inchbald  allen johnson  a conan doyle  agnes robinson  

Friday, September 19, 2008

Aeschylus

Aeschylus (525-456)

Aeschylus was the first of the three ancient Greek tragedians whose work has survived, the others being Sophocles and Euripides, and is often recognized as the father of tragedy. His name derives from the Greek word aiskhos (), meaning "shame". According to Aristotle, he expanded the number of characters in plays to allow for conflict among them; previously, characters interacted only with the chorus. Only seven of an estimated seventy to ninety plays by Aeschylus have survived into modern times; there is an ongoing debate about the authorship of one of these plays, Prometheus Bound. At least one of Aeschylus's works was influenced by the Persian invasion of Greece, which took place during his lifetime. His play The Persians remains a good primary source of information about this period in Greek history. The war was so important to the Greeks and to Aeschylus himself that, upon his death around 456 BC, his epitaph commemorated his participation in the Greek victory at Marathon rather than his success as a playwright.



[Prometheus Bound And Seven Against Thebes | The Agamemnon Of Aeschylus | The House Of Atreus | Prometheus Bound | The Orestia | The Persians | The Seven Against Thebes | The Suppliants]

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Brian Irving

Brian Irving

Brian Irving is a Canadian screenwriter and film-maker. As a producer his past projects have included Sabrina the Teenage Witch starring Melissa Joan Hart, for Viacom Television. His most notable works as a writer and story editor are: Sabrina The Teenage Witch, Redline, Deadly Past, Vampire Hunter "D", Rats and Sabotage.


H Irving's Books:


[The Drama]


Tags: charles fort  a w stirling  joseph conrad  anzia yezierska  david eugene smith  william allan neilson  adolf schwayer  whitelaw reid  dudley campbell  

E Nesbit

E Nesbit (1858-1924)

E Nesbit (1858-1924)

Edith Nesbit (married name Edith Bland; 15 August 1858 - 4 May 1924) was an English author and poet whose children's works were published under the name of E. Nesbit. She wrote or collaborated on over 60 books of fiction for children, several of which have been adapted for film and television. She was also a political activist and co-founded the Fabian Society, a precursor to the modern Labour Party.



[People Of Africa]


Tags: william hart  augusta jane evans wilson  iginio ugo tarachetti  guido gezelle  emilio salgari  achmed abdullah  albert berg  w h kster henke  edith ballinger price  

William Hill Brown

William Hill Brown (1765-1793)

William Hill Brown (1765-1793) title=

William Hill Brown (November 1765, Boston - 2 September 1793, Murfreesboro, North Carolina) was an American novelist, the author of what is usually considered the first American novel, The Power of Sympathy (1789) and "Harriot, Or The Domestick Reconciliation" as well as the serial essay "The Reformer" published in Isaiah Thomas' Massachusetts Magazine.



[Handbook On Japanning 2nd Edition]

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Voltaire Translated And Adapted By Frank Morlock 2002

Voltaire Translated And Adapted By Frank Morlock 2002

Franois-Marie Arouet (21 November 1694 30 May 1778), better known by the pen name Voltaire, was a French Enlightenment writer and philosopher famous for his wit and for his advocacy of civil liberties, including freedom of religion and free trade. Voltaire was a prolific writer and produced works in almost every literary form including plays, poetry, novels, essays, historical and scientific works, more than 20,000 letters and more than 2,000 books and pamphlets. He was an outspoken supporter of social reform, despite strict censorship laws and harsh penalties for those who broke them. As a satirical polemicist, he frequently made use of his works to criticize intolerance, religious dogma and the French institutions of his day. Voltaire was one of several Enlightenment figures whose works and ideas influenced important thinkers of both the American and French Revolutions.



[A London Life | A Monastery Of European Monks An Anonymous Persian Play | A Raw Youth A Dramatization Of The Dostoevski Novel | Amadis By Quinault | Armida By Quinault 1686 | Atys By Quinault | Better Luck Next Time Adapted From A Story By Arlo Bates | Blame It On Eve By Nelly Roussel | Cadmus And Hermione By Quinault | Castor And Pollux By Rameau And Bernard An Opera | Chaste Isabelle A Parade By Thomas Gueulette | Christmas At Thompson Hall | Colin And Colette By Beaumarchais | Congreve Comedy Of Manners | Cyrano And Moliere By George Jubin | Death Of Caesar By Voltaire | Dido By Marmontel Music By Piccini | Don Quixote don Quichotte By Victorien Sardou 1890 | Europe | Feydeau I Never Cheat On My Husband | Froggy | Hercules Dying By Marmontel | Heroes And Romantics Of Our Times A Comedy In One Act | Irene By Voltaire | Isis By Quinault | Jacques Damour By Emile Zola And Hennique | Jurgen A Play Based On The Novel Of George Branch Cabell | Lady Liberty | Lady Macbeth By J Le Sire | Louis Xiv And The Flower Girl Of The Orangery | Moliere A Play In Five Acts By George Sand | Nothing Worse Than A Fright | Oberon Horn | Oedipus By Voltaire | Olympias A Tragedy About The Daughter Of Alexander The Great | Orpheus In Hell An Opera By Jean Francois Regnard | Painting In A Cul De Sac By Carmontelle | Pandora By Voltaire | Penelope By Marmontel Music By Piccini | Pere Goriot a Drama Vaudeville | Perseus By Quinault | Pregnant With Virtue By T Gueullete | Restoration Comedy Shadwell | Rustic Amours A Pastoral By Favart | Samson An Opera By Voltaire | Samson And Delilah From A Story By D H Lawrence | Scanderberg A Tragedy | Scene Added For The Anniversary Of Moliere | Sherlock Holmes And The Grand Horizontals | Sherlock Holmes In The Adventure Of The Mulberry Street Irregular | Shylock The Merchant Of Venice By Alfred De Vigny | Tanis And Zelide A Tragedy To Be Set To Music By Voltaire | Teaser A Drama In One Act | The Advantages Of Being Ugly By Legouve | The Adventure Of Merlin Tomb | The Baron Of Otranto An Opera Buffa | The Congressman Nightmare | The Courier From Milan A Parade | The Curious Circumstance Of The Maid Mustache | The Duke Dalencon A Tragedy By Voltaire | The Golden Goblin | The Man Who Fell From Heaven A Sherlock Holmes Mystery | The Man Who Saw The Devil By Gaston Leroux | The Marriages From A Story By Henry James | The Moonshine Vine | The Real Sherlock Holmes | The School For Lovers By Alain Rene Le Sage | The Soldier Return By Melanie Waldor 1863 | The Stendhal Hamlet Scenarios | The Stumbling Block Of Morals By Palissot | The Temple Of Glory An Opera | The Two Wine Casks Sketch Of A Comic Opera By Voltaire | The Unforeseen Wager | The Vampire By Charles Nodier | The Village Coquette Or The Supposed Lottery | The Writing Lesson | Violent Attachments | Wayward Wenches By Jean Francois Regnard | Zeneida By M De Cahusac | Jesus Of Nazareth | The Comical History Of Doctor Faustus]


Tags: carrie vaughn  rog phillips  algernon blackwood  louisa may alcott  baron holbach  fyodor doestoyevsky  henry charles lahee  fredrika runeberg  gerolamo rovetta  

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Bronte Woodard

Bronte Woodard (1940-1980)

Bronte Woodard (October 8, 1940 - August 6, 1980) was an American writer best known for penning the adapted screenplay for the hit film Grease. He was born October 8, 1940 in Alabama. While he is most well known for his work on Grease, he also co-wrote the screenplay for the 1980 Village People film Can't Stop the Music with Grease producer Allan Carr. He died of AIDS at the age of 39 on August 6, 1980 in Los Angeles, California.



[A Review Of Uncle Tom Cabin]


Tags: fredric brown  friedrich gerstcker  william mann  arthur mee a hammerton eds  william minto  dorothy sayers  a boyd correll  cosmo hamilton  anthony hope  emily orr  

Carit Etlar

Carit Etlar (1816-1900)

Carit Etlar, the better-known pen name of Carl Brosbll (August 7, 1816 - May 9, 1900), was a Danish author, known mostly for his 1853 book Gjngehvdingen about the eponymous Svend Poulsen Gnge.



[Kirjava Joukko]

Mary Russell Mitford

Mary Russell Mitford

Mary Russell Mitford title=

Mary Russell Mitford (16 December 1787 - 10 January 1855), was an English novelist and dramatist. She was born at Alresford, Hampshire. Her place in English literature is as the author of Our Village. This series of sketches of village scenes and vividly drawn characters was based upon life in Three Mile Cross, a hamlet in the parish of Shinfield, near Reading in Berkshire, where she lived.



[The Forty Seven Ronins]

Monday, September 15, 2008

Lafcadio Hearn

Lafcadio Hearn

Patrick Lafcadio Hearn (27 June 1850 26 September 1904), also known as Koizumi Yakumo after gaining Japanese citizenship, was an author, best known for his books about Japan. He is especially well-known for his collections of Japanese legends and ghost stories, such as Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things.



[Glimpses Of Unfamiliar Japan Vol I]


Tags: evelyn underhill  daniel young  george helgesen fitch  william canton  frederic kidder  tobias buckell  alonzo reed and brainerd kellogg  h cotterill  henry edward bird  

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Charles Farrar Browne

Charles Farrar Browne

Charles Farrar Browne

Charles Farrar Browne (April 26, 1834 March 6, 1867) was a United States humor writer, better known under his nom de plume, Artemus Ward. At birth, his surname was "Brown. " He added the "e" after he became famous.


J Farrar's Books:


[Mary Anderson]


Tags: izola forrester  henry wheatley  j smeaton chase  edward sell  howard dudley  cao xueqin  george clark  lowell howard morrow  daniel collins  

Frederic G Kenyon

Frederic G Kenyon

Sir Frederic George Kenyon GBE KCB TD FBA FSA (15 January 1863 23 August 1952) was a British paleographer and biblical and classical scholar. He occupied from 1889 to 1931 a series of posts at the British Museum. He was also the president of the British Academy from 1917 to 1921, and from 1918 to 1952 he was Gentleman Usher of the Purple Rod. Kenyon was born in London, the son of John Robert Kenyon, Vinerian Professor of English Law at Oxford. After graduating B.A.



[The Letters Of Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1 Of 2]


Tags: al bromley  emil frommel  frank herbert  edward abbott parry  adolphe thiers  charlotte dacre  amy brooks  emily ruete  felicia buttz clark  

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Sir William Brereton Baronet

Sir William Brereton Baronet

Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet (13 September 1604 7 April 1661) was an English soldier, politician, and writer.



[With Joffre At Verdun]

Allan M Brandt

Allan M Brandt (1953-now)

Allan M. Brandt (born 1953) is an American medical historian, and academic.



[Vand Og Stenhoejsplanter En Vejledning For Havevenner]

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Bob Jackson Growth Expert

Bob Jackson Growth Expert (1949-now)

Robert 'Bob' Jackson, is an Anglican priest who has extensively researched, written and consulted on the subject of church growth. After reading Economics at King's College, Cambridge, Bob worked as an Economic Advisor to the Departments of Transport and Environment in Westminster. After training at St John's College, Nottingham he was ordained in 1981. He worked as a Curate in Fulwood, Sheffield before becoming the Vicar of St Mark's Grenoside in 1984. In 1992 Bob became Vicar of Scarborough at St Mary's church, a role which he held until 2001. From 2001 until 2004 Bob was a member of Springboard, Archbishop George Carey's initiative to encourage, renew and mobilize the Church for evangelism. Bob became Archdeacon of Walsall and Bishop's Growth Officer for the Diocese of Lichfield in 2004, a role in which he put the ideas and research from his time at Springboard into practice. In 2009 he retired from his role as Archdeacon to concentrate on church growth consultancy.



[Anecdotes Incidents Of The Deaf And Dumb]

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Gerald Of Wales

Gerald Of Wales (1146-1223)

Gerald Of Wales (1146-1223)

Gerald of Wales (c. 1146 c. 1223), also known as Gerallt Gymro in Welsh or Giraldus Cambrensis in Latin, archdeacon of Brecon, was a medieval clergyman and chronicler of his times. Born around 1146 at Manorbier Castle in Pembrokeshire, Wales, he was of mixed Norman and Welsh blood, his name being Gerald de Barri.



[The Description Of Wales | The Itinerary Of Archbishop Baldwin Through Wales]

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Albert Bushnell Hart With Blanche Hazard

Albert Bushnell Hart With Blanche Hazard

Albert Bushnell Hart, Ph.D. (July 1, 1854-July 16, 1943), was an American historian, writer, and teacher. One of the first generation of professionally trained historians in the United States, a prolific author and editor of historical works, Albert Bushnell Hart became, as Samuel Eliot Morison described him, "The Grand Old Man" of American history, looking the part with his "patriarchal full beard and flowing moustaches."



[Colonial Children]

Richard Guy Wilson

Richard Guy Wilson (1940-now)

Dr. Richard Guy Wilson (born 1940) is a noted architectural historian and Commonwealth Professor in Architectural History at the University of Virginia. Wilson was born and raised in Los Angeles (residing in a house designed by Rudolph Schindler). He received his B.A. at the University of Colorado in 1963, and his M.A. and Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in 1968 and 1972 respectively. Wilson taught at Michigan and Iowa State University before moving to the University of Virginia in 1976.



[Back To Julie | Double Take | The Inhabited]

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Alice Brown

Alice Brown (1856-1948)

Alice Brown (December 5, 1856 June 21, 1948) was an American novelist, poet and playwright, best known as a writer of local color stories. She also contributed a chapter to the collaborative novel, The Whole Family (1908). She was born in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire and graduated from Robinson Seminary in Exeter in 1876. She later worked as a school teacher for five years, but moved to Boston to write full-time in 1884. She first worked at the Christian Register and then, starting in 1885, the Youth's Companion. She was a prolific author for many years, but her popularity waned after the turn of the 20th century. She produced a book a year until she stopped writing in 1935 http://seacoastnh. com/women/brown. html. She corresponded with Rev. Michael Earls of the College of the Holy Cross and with Father J. M. Lelen of Falmouth, Kentucky, with whom she also exchanged poems. Yale University and Holy Cross now have the only sizable collections of her letters, since she ordered that most of her personal correspondence should be destroyed after her death. Brown died in Boston, Massachusetts in 1948.



[Country Neighbors | Meadow Grass | Old Crow | Rose Macleod | The Day Of His Youth | The Prisoner | Bachelor Fancy | Tiverton Tales]