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the experience of reading in Britain, from 1450 to 1945...

Reading Experience Database UK Historical image of readers
 
 
 
 

Listings for Author:  

Julia Kavanagh

  

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Julia Kavanagh : Nathalie

Read "Nathalie" by Julia Kavanagh

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Albert Battiscombe      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Natalie

'"Desperately in love with the hero", 26-year-old Mary Gladstone confided to her journal in 1874 after finishing Julia Kavanagh's "Natalie" (1850).'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Mary Gladstone      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Adele

'Mary Gladstone ... devoured Julia Kavanagh's "Adele" (1858) ...'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Mary Gladstone      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Natalie

'... "Natalie" [by Julia Kavanagh] she [Mary Gladstone] did not think measured up to the same author's "Daisy Burns" (1853), although her recommendation ... led her father, lately ejected from the premiership, to read it too.'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: William Ewart Gladstone      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Rachel Gray

'Meta & I have read this 1st vol of Rachel Gray - I think it very interesting'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth and Margaret (Meta) Gaskell     Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : [possibly] French Women of Letters

'I am very much obliged to you for letting me see Miss Kavanagh's new work. I will take great care of it and return it before long.'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Madeleine

Charlotte Bronte to W. S. Williams, 22 November 1848:

'I have read "Madeleine." It is a fine pearl in a simple setting. Julia Kavanagh has my esteem; I would rather know her than many far more briliant personages. Somehow my heart leans more to her than to Eliza Lynn, for instance. Not that I have read either "Amymone" or "Azeth," but I have seen extracts from them which I found it literally impossible to digest. They present to my imagination Lytton Bulwer [sic] in petticoats — an overwhelming vision.'

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Charlotte Brontë      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Nathalie

Charlotte Bronte to Julia Kavanagh, 21 January 1851:

'I fear you will have thought hard things of me ere this — pronounced me ungrateful [...] but the fact is I only received "Nathalie" a few days since; she has been waiting in London to come down in a parcel with some other books. At last however I have made her acquaintance, read her through from title-page to "Finis" [...] I was thoroughly interested and highly pleased. Your reader is made to realize places and persons; he becomes an inmate of the old Chateau of Sainville [...] Rose Montelieu is excellent; I thought those passages which refer to her illness and death to be among the very best in the book. Nathalie's perverseness as well as her final submission struck me as a little exaggerated — as did some of the traits in M. de Sainville's character — but I said I would not criticise [...] In short I have to thank you for a treat; the work merits success, and the favourable notices which have been given by the various literary journals may I trust be taken as evidences that it has secured it.'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Charlotte Brontë      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Women of Christianity

Charlotte Bronte to W. S. Williams, 25 March 1852:

'I ought long since to have acknowledged the gratification with which I read Miss Kavanagh's "Women of Christianity." Her charity and (on the whole) her impartiality are very beautiful [goes on to express reservations regarding some of author's representations of Protestant and Roman Catholic Christianity].'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Charlotte Brontë      Print: Book

  

Julia Kavanagh : Daisy Burns (vol. 1)

Charlotte Bronte to W. S. Williams, 9 March 1853:

'I have tried to read "Daisy Burns"; at the close of the Ist Vol. I stopped. I must not give an opinion of it for I should seem severe. Miss Kavanagh's intentions are thoroughly good — her execution in this case seems to me disastrous [...] I find in it no real blood or life; it is painted and cold.'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Charlotte Brontë      Print: Book

  

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