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32+ Werke 196 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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Beinhaltet die Namen: H. Harland, Sidney Luska

Bildnachweis: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Werke von Henry Harland

My Friend Prospero (1947) 22 Exemplare
The Lady Paramount (1901) 12 Exemplare
Grey Roses (1977) 11 Exemplare
The Yellow Book, An Illustrated Quarterly, Vol. 2, July 1894 (1894) — Herausgeber — 8 Exemplare
Comedies and Errors (1898) 7 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Victorian Love Stories: An Oxford Anthology (1996) — Mitwirkender — 48 Exemplare
The Yellow Book: An Anthology, April 1894 - April 1897 (1896) — Mitwirkender — 39 Exemplare
Cuentos de amor victorianos (2004) — Mitwirkender — 21 Exemplare
Short Story Classics [American], Volume 4 (1905) — Mitwirkender — 17 Exemplare
Selected English short stories XIX & XX centuries (1914) — Mitwirkender — 11 Exemplare
Short Stories of the Past (1950) — Mitwirkender — 2 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Andere Namen
Luska, Sidney
Geburtstag
1861-03-01
Todestag
1905-12-20
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Organisationen
American Academy of Arts and Letters (Literature, 1898)
Kurzbiographie
Henry Harland (1 March 1861 ¿ 20 December 1905), novelist and editor, was born in Brooklyn and attended the City College of New York and for a short spell Harvard Divinity School. In May 1884, he married Aline Herminie Merriam, who shared his artistic interests. His literary career falls into two distinct sections. During the first of these, writing under the pseudonym Sidney Luska, he produced a series of highly sensational novels, written with little regard to literary quality. But in 1889 Harland moved to London and fell under the influence of the Aesthetic movement. He began writing under his own name and, in 1894, became the founding editor of The Yellow Book. The short story collections of this new period, A Latin Quarter Courtship (1889), Mademoiselle Miss (1893), Grey Roses (1895), and Comedies and Errors (1898), were praised by critics but had little general popularity. He finally achieved a wide readership with The Cardinal's Snuff-box (1900), which was followed by The Lady Paramount (1901) and My Friend Prospero (1903). His last novel, The Royal End (1909), was incomplete when he died. His wife finished it according to his notes. Harland died in 1905 at Sanremo, Italy, after a prolonged period of tuberculosis.

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Rezensionen

The Cardinal's Snuff-Box is the first of Henry Harland's Catholic novels. If you ask me it's semi-autobiographical, but what do I know? The hero is an author who writes obscure books that no one reads. He is in love with a woman he's seen but never actually talked to and has immortalized her in one of his books. Now he's vacationing in Italy, and who should his landlady be but his anonymous ideal! But he's a rather annoying aesthete of the late 19th century variety, and it will take quite a bit of gentle persuasion by her Cardinal uncle-in-law (she's a widow) to get him to see the light and join the Catholic Church. Now if only those same avuncular skills could get those two together . . .

Much like Harland's My Friend Prospero, which I read last year, this is a book full of fluff. Don't read if you are in a serious mood, or looking for something deep and weighty, because this is not one of those books. However those looking for something quick and fun may want to seek it out (originally written in 1900, it's available for free on Project Gutenberg.
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
inge87 | Mar 17, 2014 |
Audrey Beardsley was one of the co-founders of this literary and art journal, but he had left by the time this edition was published.
 
Gekennzeichnet
SteveJohnson | Jul 22, 2013 |
My Friend Prospero is a rather fluffy romance with aspirations towards operetta-level drama. John heir to the Barony of Blanchemain boards with a local vicar and his young niece (who calls him Prospero, because she can) so that he can visit the manor with it remarkable collection of art. The fact that it only costs him 6 francs 50 a week helps, since his uncle has never thought to give him an allowance. The book opens with him meeting the widow of his cousin, who had held the title before his uncle, and reconciling with her (suffice to say the cousin's great-grandfather stole the title from his brother). Having an interest in the fate of the title, she naturally wants to see him wed, but he hasn't met a girl worth marrying -- until that very moment, when he spies an extremely beautiful girl. She's the sister of the manor's owner, the Prince of Zelt-Neuminster, but naturally he spends most of the book thinking that she's the daughter of a miller and she believing he comes from a family of farmers. Naturally, everyone lives happily every after . . . in a novel like this, what else could they do?

Harland wrote three extremely fluffy Catholic romances at the end of his career: The Cardinal's Snuff Box, The Lady Paramount, and My Friend Prospero. This one is in my opinion the best of the lot. If you like turn of the century-style light fiction, you'll probably enjoy bits of all of them, but they have a decidedly period air to them that many modern readers may find a tad ridiculous. Still, for fans of the genre, My Friend Prospero is definitely worth reading.
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1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
inge87 | Apr 29, 2013 |

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