Georgia Wood Pangborn: Difference between revisions

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; Posthumous collections
; Posthumous collections
* ''[[The Wind at Midnight]]'' (1999: [[Ash-Tree Press]]) (introduction by [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]])
* ''[[The Wind at Midnight]]'' (1999: [[Ash-Tree Press]]) (introduction by [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]])
==References==
{{reflist}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
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* [http://www.litgothic.com/Authors/pangborn.html Literary Gothic]
* [http://www.litgothic.com/Authors/pangborn.html Literary Gothic]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Pangborn "Edgar Pangborn"], Wikipedia
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Pangborn "Edgar Pangborn"], Wikipedia





Revision as of 15:22, 22 December 2010

Georgia Wood Pangborn (Aug. 29, 1872 - April 17, 1958) was a notable writer of supernatural fiction and poet. She was mother of noted SF writer Edgar Pangborn, and of Mary Pangborn, also a writer of weird stories.

Names

  • Georgia Wood (birthname)
  • Georgia Wood Pangborn (married name; she was married to Harry Levi Pangborn)

Bibliography

first published works:

Short fiction
  • "Andy MacPherson's House" (Romance March 1920)
  • "Bixby's Bridge" (Harper's March 1917)
  • "The Boulder" (Holland's Magazine December 1925) (non-supernatural)
  • "Cara" (Harper's Monthly January 1914)
  • "Doubting Castle" (Bookman July 1906)
  • "The Fourth Watch" (Bookman November 1905)
  • "The Ghost Flower" (Bookman November 1908)
  • "The Gray Collie" (Scribner's Magazine (July 1903)
  • "The Haunted Coat" (Collier's November 10, 1906)
  • "The Ice Storm" (Women's Home Companion March 1918)
  • "The Intruder" (Harper's June 1907)
  • "The North Wind" (Chicago Tribune literary supplement December 16, 1926)
  • "The Rescue" (Woman's Home Companion March 1912)
  • "The Ring of the Great Wish" (Forum May 1914)
  • "The Substitute" (1914) (Harper's Monthly Magazine, Dec. 1914)
  • "The Twilight Gardener" (Touchstone June 1917)


Novels
  • Roman Biznet (Houghton Mifflin, 1902) ("It flirts with supernatural ideas but is not occult."[1])


Posthumous collections

References



Further reading