appassionato, to bookstodon
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The Kagero Diary

A Woman’s Autobiographical Text From Tenth-Century Japan
Japan is the only country in the world where women writers laid the foundations of classical literature. The Kagerō Diary commands our attention as the first extant work of that rich and brilliant tradition.

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yaohsi,
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@appassionato @bookstodon Men were busy writing boring things in bad Chinese

scotlit, to bookstodon
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Elspeth Barker (1940–2022) was born , 16 November

Maggie O’Farrell called Barker’s classic O CALEDONIA

“one of those books you proselytize about; you want to beckon others aboard its glorious train. … I once decided to become friends with someone on the sole basis that she named O CALEDONIA as her favourite book”

@bookstodon

1/3

https://lithub.com/maggie-ofarrell-on-elspeth-barkers-modern-scottish-classic-o-caledonia/

peterbrown,
@peterbrown@mastodon.scot avatar

@scotlit @bookstodon nice to see that the BBC are persisting with the narrative that Scotland is bleak, dark, and ultimately doomed.

patrascan,

@peterbrown @scotlit @bookstodon Pay no attention to BBC's negativity. Instead, tune in the Hebrides Overture to experience mystery, majesty and sublime beauty in the best Romantic tradition by way of Scotland. At least that's what I hear every time I listen to this lovely tone poem.

scotlit, to litstudies
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New!
POEMS BY A LADY
by Helen Craik
Ed. by Rachel Mann & Patrick Scott

The of Helen Craik (1751–1825), novelist & friend of , was long thought lost. The rediscovery of her 1790 “Poems by a Lady”, transcribed here for the first time, invites a fresh evaluation of her life & work, & adds to the critical reassessment of poetry by women in the era

@litstudies

https://asls.org.uk/publications/books/volumes/poems-by-a-lady/

scotlit,
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

@litstudies

“My interest was sparked by the circumstances – the discovery of a manuscript that had long been thought lost. Add to that the very questionable rumours surrounding Craik’s abrupt departure from Arbigland, and you’ve got yourself a plot that seems to jump out of the pages of academic fiction.”

—Rachel Mann & Patrick Scott discuss their co-edited edition of Helen Craik’s POEMS BY A LADY

https://www.bars.ac.uk/blog/?p=4847

scotlit, to litstudies
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Susan Ferrier (1782–1854) was born , 7 Sept. Her 3 novels—Marriage, The Inheritance, & Destiny—are vivid & humorous accounts of Scottish society. Often compared to her contemporary , Ferrier’s satires are much more vicious…

A 🎂 🧵

@litstudies

1/6

https://www.scottishwomenwritersontheweb.net/writers-a-to-z/susan-ferrier

scotlit,
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

@litstudies
“Miss Ferrier avowedly made thumb-nail sketches,—as is proved in one of the few surviving letters to or from her,—out of which grew the merciless caricatures that created her fame”

An 1893 article in The Atlantic Magazine, contrasting the careers of Susan Ferrier & Jane Austen

5/6

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1893/06/miss-austen-and-miss-ferrier/529989/

scotlit,
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

@litstudies
“THE INHERITANCE is, then, a novel concerned with questions of morality and education, but also national identity, the differences between Scottish and English cultures, and the stereotypes within human nature that both divide and unite the two. It is also very funny”

—The Books & Borrowing 1750–1830 Project on Susan Ferrier’s second novel, THE INHERITANCE

6/6
https://borrowing.stir.ac.uk/forgotten-best-sellers-susan-ferriers-the-inheritance-1824/

scotlit, to random
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A birthday 🧵 for Violet Jacob (1863–1946) – poet, novelist, short story writer, & key figure in the 20th-century Scottish renaissance & language revival – born , 1 September


1/6
https://www.scottishwomenwritersontheweb.net/writers-a-to-z/violet-jacob

scotlit,
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

Many of Jacob’s books have been digitised and can be read online via the National Library of Scotland.

Here’s “The Wild Geese”, from Songs of Angus (1915)


2/6

scotlit,
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

John Buchan called FLEMINGTON – Violet Jacob’s novel of the 1745 uprising – “the best Scots romantic novel since The Master of Ballantrae”, & The List magazine chose it as one of their Best 100 Scottish Books of All Time

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3/6

Tinido, to bookstodon German
@Tinido@chaos.social avatar

I've started E. M. Anderson's The Remarkable Retirement of Edna Fisher , and I already love Edna so much, I sneaked at the end, if she will be still around. The older I get, the less I like getting my heroes killed.
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scotlit, to litstudies
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

Helen Craik’s “lost” poetry now found

The writer published five romance novels by the early 1800s but never put her in print. In 1919, excerpts of her poetry appeared in a newspaper, but the source of these poems – a notebook she presented to a family friend – disappeared. Now Craik’s poetry manuscript has been found & published by two @uofsc faculty members

@litstudies

https://www.sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/about/news/2023/helen_craik.php

scotlit, to bookstodon
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“Given how neglected Mavor’s reputation is today, it might come as a surprise to learn that when she made the Booker shortlist she was 46 years old and the author of three previous novels and two biographies; all of which had been very well received.”

Elizabeth Mavor’s 1973 Booker-nominated novel A Green Equinox has just been republished, by McNally Editions in the US & as a Virago Modern Classic in the UK

@bookstodon

https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features/why-you-should-read-a-green-equinox-by-elizabeth-mavor

scotlit, to litstudies
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

“My interest was sparked by the circumstances – the discovery of a manuscript that had long been thought lost. Add to that the very questionable rumours surrounding Craik’s abrupt departure from Arbigland, and you’ve got yourself a plot that seems to jump out of the pages of academic fiction.”

—Rachel Mann & Patrick Scott discuss their co-edited edition of Helen Craik’s POEMS BY A LADY (Nov 2023)

@litstudies

https://www.bars.ac.uk/blog/?p=4847

Tinido, to bookstodon German
@Tinido@chaos.social avatar

Vor Wochen bestellt, nun wieder lieferbar. Ich bin gespannt.
@lesekreis @bookstodon

Tinido, to bookstodon German
@Tinido@chaos.social avatar

Lucy Scoles is such a great literary critic / essayist, she makes you want to immediately read the novels she writes about. I loved this little portrait of Elizabeth Mavor (of whom I've never heard before) and her novels of love among women.
@bookstodon https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features/elizabeth-mavor-relished-spirited-unorthodox-women-and-her-work-is-ripe

scotlit, to litstudies
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Forgotten Bestsellers

“We have not met with any thing nearly so good as this since we read the Castle Rackrent, and the Popular Tales of Miss Edgeworth”
—The Edinburgh Review, June 1810

The Books & Borrowing 1750–1830 project blogs about Elizabeth Hamilton’s 1THE COTTAGERS OF GLENBURNIE

@litstudies

https://borrowing.stir.ac.uk/forgotten-best-sellers-elizabeth-hamiltons-the-cottagers-of-glenburnie-1808/

scotlit, to bookstodon
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The best Scottish novels centring working-class women

Elissa Soave – author of GINGER & ME (HarperCollins, 2023) – selects five books featuring Scottish working-class women

@bookstodon

https://shepherd.com/best-books/scottish-reads-centring-working-class-women

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