May Sinclair: Difference between revisions
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'''May Sinclair''' (pseudonym for '''Mary Amelia St. Clair''') was a 19th / 20th century suffragist, writer, and critic; she invented the term "[[stream of consciousness]]". In addition to her other writings, she wrote ghost stories and included supernatural elements in some of her fiction, especially her short stories. | '''May Sinclair''' (pseudonym for '''Mary Amelia St. Clair''') was a 19th / 20th century suffragist, writer, and critic; she invented the term "[[stream of consciousness]]". In addition to her other writings, she wrote ghost stories and included supernatural elements in some of her fiction, especially her short stories. Wikipedia notes that "she settled with a companion" in the 1930s. | ||
==Names== | ==Names== | ||
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==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
; supernatural / ghost-stories | |||
* "The Villa Desiree" | |||
* "[[Where Their Fire Is Not Quenched]]" (1922) | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
Latest revision as of 21:08, 14 December 2010
May Sinclair (pseudonym for Mary Amelia St. Clair) was a 19th / 20th century suffragist, writer, and critic; she invented the term "stream of consciousness". In addition to her other writings, she wrote ghost stories and included supernatural elements in some of her fiction, especially her short stories. Wikipedia notes that "she settled with a companion" in the 1930s.
Names
- Mary Amelia St. Clair (legal name)
- May Sinclair (pseudonym)
Bibliography
- supernatural / ghost-stories
- "The Villa Desiree"
- "Where Their Fire Is Not Quenched" (1922)
Further reading
- Theophilus Ernest Martin Boll (1973) Miss May Sinclair: Novelist; A Biographical and Critical Introduction
- Suzanne Raitt (2000) May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian