Autoren-Bilder

Dorothy Black (1) (1890–1977)

Autor von Letters of an Indian Judge to an English Gentlewoman

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Dorothy Black findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

104+ Werke 231 Mitglieder 4 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Werke von Dorothy Black

Letters of an Indian Judge to an English Gentlewoman (1934) — Autor — 97 Exemplare
The Foot of the Rainbow (1961) 3 Exemplare
All Love Excelling (1937) 2 Exemplare
White Woman (1938) 2 Exemplare
Someday I'll Find You (1934) 2 Exemplare
What No Man Knows (1935) 2 Exemplare
The Magic Egg (1922) 2 Exemplare
Romance - The Loveliest Thing (1925) 2 Exemplare
Paradise for Two (1963) 2 Exemplare
Mistress of Skula (1968) 2 Exemplare
Dance, Little Lady (1940) 2 Exemplare
First Love (1940) 2 Exemplare
Lovers (1939) 2 Exemplare
If Sorrow Follows After (1938) 2 Exemplare
Odd Job Man (1938) 2 Exemplare
The Hidden Heart (1947) 2 Exemplare
Corner House (1937) 2 Exemplare
Summer's End (1937) 2 Exemplare
The Pineapple Garden (1935) 2 Exemplare
The Loving Adventure (1934) 2 Exemplare
Idle Women (1928) 2 Exemplare
The Man with a Square Face (1916) 2 Exemplare
Her Lonely Soldier (1916) 2 Exemplare
Women Men Forget (1931) 2 Exemplare
Amri Clare (1932) 2 Exemplare
Love in Exile (1936) 2 Exemplare
The Spring Returns (1935) 2 Exemplare
The Broken Lute (1935) 2 Exemplare
Love Came Late (1935) 2 Exemplare
If I Should Lose You (1937) 2 Exemplare
O Come, My Love (1967) 1 Exemplar
Luxury Cruise (1967) 1 Exemplar
As Only Love Can Do (1967) 1 Exemplar
Wild Gold Rose (1967) 1 Exemplar
Return to Glenfern (1965) 1 Exemplar
The Winter Wind (1967) 1 Exemplar
A Letter to My Love (1966) 1 Exemplar
When Love is True (1963) 1 Exemplar
As Long as You Need Me (1964) 1 Exemplar
And Love Forever New (1964) 1 Exemplar
Love Endureth (1968) 1 Exemplar
The Captain's Wife (1963) 1 Exemplar
Sisters Three (1966) 1 Exemplar
One Day in Spring (1969) 1 Exemplar
There is a Love for Everyone (1968) 1 Exemplar
Where Love Is (1974) 1 Exemplar
Wise Folly (1933) 1 Exemplar
To Meet My Love (1950) 1 Exemplar
Life's little day 1 Exemplar
Told in the Sunshine (1917) 1 Exemplar
It Had to be You (1974) 1 Exemplar
From Faraway (1974) 1 Exemplar
Flower of the Snow (1973) 1 Exemplar
Make This My Home (1963) 1 Exemplar
Love Belongs to Everyone (1972) 1 Exemplar
Heritage of Love (1971) 1 Exemplar
Romantic Stranger (1970) 1 Exemplar
I Will Remember (1970) 1 Exemplar
In a Little Spanish Town (1962) 1 Exemplar
Love Must Be Wise (1969) 1 Exemplar
Midsummer Magic (1969) 1 Exemplar
A Sprig of Heather (1962) 1 Exemplar
Life with Money (1960) 1 Exemplar
The Imprudent Princess (1961) 1 Exemplar
The Gay Adventure (1945) 1 Exemplar
Peacock Pie (1952) 1 Exemplar
We'll Meet Again (1951) 1 Exemplar
The Stag at Bay (1950) 1 Exemplar
The One I Love (1950) 1 Exemplar
The Broken Moon (1949) 1 Exemplar
Song Before Dawn (1948) 1 Exemplar
Last Love (1946) 1 Exemplar
Fantastic Journey (1944) 1 Exemplar
My Love for You (1953) 1 Exemplar
Alone Am I (1944) 1 Exemplar
The Sun is Near (1943) 1 Exemplar
Burmese Picnic (1943) 1 Exemplar
My Love Belongs to Me (1942) 1 Exemplar
Two for Mirth (1942) 1 Exemplar
Never Leave Me (1941) 1 Exemplar
Sailor, Sailor! (1941) 1 Exemplar
Well Done, Belinda! (1952) 1 Exemplar
The Blackthorn Winter (1953) 1 Exemplar
Hold in Your Keeping (1961) 1 Exemplar
Afraid to Love (1958) 1 Exemplar
The Quiet Waters (1961) 1 Exemplar
Young Doctor Shannon (1961) 1 Exemplar
The Orange Robe (1960) 1 Exemplar
The Unforgettable Miss Jones (1960) 1 Exemplar
The Long Day Done (1959) 1 Exemplar
Where No Love Is (1959) 1 Exemplar
The Loveless Marriage (1958) 1 Exemplar
Love Locked Out (1958) 1 Exemplar
Three Lame Men (1954) 1 Exemplar
Gentle Stranger (1956) 1 Exemplar
Forsaking All Others (1956) 1 Exemplar
The House Without Doors (1955) 1 Exemplar
The Trees Were Green (1955) 1 Exemplar
The Blue Orchid (1955) 1 Exemplar
Follow Your Heart (1954) 1 Exemplar
Candles in the Dark (1954) 1 Exemplar
The Uphill Road (1957) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Fifty Enthralling Stories of the Mysterious East (1930) — Mitwirkender — 15 Exemplare
Merry Times (1916) 2 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Black MacLeish, Dorothy Delius Allan
Andere Namen
Black, Dorothy
Delius, Peter
Geburtstag
1890-03-27
Todestag
1977
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
UK
Geburtsort
Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK
Sterbeort
Scotland, UK
Wohnorte
Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK
Burma
Scotland, UK
Beziehungen
Delius, Clare (mother)
Delius, Frederick (uncle)
Organisationen
Romantic Novelists' Association (vice-president)
Kurzbiographie
Dorothy Delius Allan Black was born on 1890 in Bradford, Yorkshire. She was the daughter of Clare Edith Delius (1866–1954) and her husband J. W. A. Black, who were married in 1889. Her mother's brother was the famous composer Frederick Delius (1862–1934). She was married with Hugh MacLeish in 1916.

She started to write very young, and her first novels were published in 1916. She used her maiden name Dorothy Black and the male pseudonym Peter Delius. At first, she wrote different types of books, including poetry and children's fiction, before concentrating on romance fiction. She travelled widely, seeking inspiration for her books set in different parts of the world. In 1943 she published anonymously Letters of an Indian Judge to an English Gentlewoman, later reprinted under her name. During the summer of 1949, she assisted the writer Marion Crawford, who was writing a series of features on life with Princess Margaret. In 1960 she wrote her autobiography The Foot of the Rainbow. In total, she published over a hundred novels and several short stories.

Dorothy Black became a vice-president of the Romantic Novelists' Association, along with Barbara Cartland. She passed away in 1977 in Scotland.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

A simply brilliant book one of my very favourites
 
Gekennzeichnet
fross | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 8, 2015 |
First published in 1934, this book purports to be the letters of an Indian lawyer who eventually becomes a judge, to an English woman he met only once at a party. The letters reveal the prejudices common in India and Burma at the time and the writer's firm belief that Colonial rule by sympathetic English men would be the best thing fior these countries. We only have the Indian's letters to read, which are also full of his family, his traditional superstitious wife, and his sons, one of whom goes to Cambridge like his father. I started this book hoping to get a slice of life as it was in Colonial times from the other point of view, of one of its inhabitants. Having a father who grew up in Burma and India at the same time this book was written, I had some familiarity with the era, so I could not shake off the feeling that these letters must have been heavily edited. I also could not quite believe that a memsahib of the Raj would have kept up such a long correspondence. And so, it turns out that the book was written by Dorothy Black, a successful romance writer. She did spend many years in Burma and was not typical of the English women there, as she hated the snobbishness and formality. I think she wrote this book in the persona of the English woman at the party, making up the judge's letters to reflect her political views. Views that were very pro Colonial nonetheless, and perhaps a little condescendingly paternalistic. But I am looking at this eighty years later, after WWIl, after Independence and after Burma's military dictatorship and its demise. Interestingly, my copy is from 1978, a year after she died and it does not credit her as the author although the book has been re-issued under her name.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
kerry1897 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 23, 2014 |
Dorothy Black (1890-1977) admits in her autobiography that she had no formal and very little informal education, couldn't spell, hated authority and was a wilful child, but from a young age she had, as she put it, 'a talent to amuse.' She could tell a good story, and by her late teens was already earning a very good living writing serial romance novels. Her life changed when she married a man she hardly knew and went to live with him in Burma.
Her autobiography is written in an impressionistic style, with descriptions of Burmese village life, boat trips and the travails of coping with the weather and snobbishness of the country but is short on details of the strange relationship with her husband. The love of her life, not her husband, is coyly referred to as A. and apart from a few lines describing his death we know very little of their short time together. She comes across as a strong individual who made choices influenced by her Victorian upbringing but had the sense to ignore idiotic advice when she was older. I was left wanting to know so much more about her.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
kerry1897 | Jan 22, 2014 |
As the title implies, this book consists of a series of letters written by an Indian judge to an English lady. We do not see her replies to his letters, but we do see his responses to comments she has made. This gives us the sense of being a voyeur, peeking into the lives of the judge and his family. This book has an old-world charm to it that you rarely, if ever, see in modern novels and, lacking all the swearing, sex and gore so common to todays novels, it makes a nice change for evening reading.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
seldombites | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 22, 2012 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
104
Auch von
2
Mitglieder
231
Beliebtheit
#97,643
Bewertung
3.1
Rezensionen
4
ISBNs
26
Favoriten
1

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