Dorothy Scarborough: Difference between revisions

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'''Dorothy Scarborough''' (1878-1935) was an American writer, including of ghost stories.  
'''Dorothy Scarborough''' (1878-1935) was an American writer, including of ghost stories, and a scholar of supernatural stories.  
 
Wikipedia: "While receiving her PhD from Columbia, she wrote a dissertation, "The Supernatural in Modern English Fiction (1917)". Sylvia Ann Grider writes in a critical introduction <ref name="multiple">Foreword to The Wind by Sylvia Ann Grider, Barker Texas History Center series, University of Texas Press, 1979. </ref> the dissertation "was so widely acclaimed by her professors and colleagues that it was published and it has become a basic reference work."
 


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
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* ''[[Selected Short Stories of Today]]'' (1935)
* ''[[Selected Short Stories of Today]]'' (1935)
* ''[[A Song Catcher in the Southern Mountains]]'' (1937, posthumous)
* ''[[A Song Catcher in the Southern Mountains]]'' (1937, posthumous)
==Notes==
{{reflist}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
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[[category:Poets]]
[[category:Poets]]
[[category:Critics]]

Revision as of 20:34, 17 December 2010

Dorothy Scarborough (1878-1935) was an American writer, including of ghost stories, and a scholar of supernatural stories.

Wikipedia: "While receiving her PhD from Columbia, she wrote a dissertation, "The Supernatural in Modern English Fiction (1917)". Sylvia Ann Grider writes in a critical introduction [1] the dissertation "was so widely acclaimed by her professors and colleagues that it was published and it has become a basic reference work."


Bibliography

Notes

  1. Foreword to The Wind by Sylvia Ann Grider, Barker Texas History Center series, University of Texas Press, 1979.

Further reading

Works by Dorothy Scarborough at Project Gutenberg: