Inez Haynes Gillmore Irwin: Difference between revisions
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==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
* ''[[Angel Island]]'' (1914) | * ''[[Angel Island]]'' (1914) | ||
* ''"The Father of His Son" (short story) Everybody's Magazine, July 1904 | |||
* ''"A Doorstep Introduction" (short story) Pearson's Magazine, Nov. 1904 | |||
* ''"Love Me, Love My Dog" (short story) Pearson's Magazine, Nov. 1904 | |||
* ''"The Start" (short story) Everybody's Magazine, Dec. 1904 | |||
* ''"The Matchbreakers" (short story) Hampton's Broadway Magazine, Nov. 1908 | |||
* ''June Jeopardy 1908, Huebsch - first novel | |||
* ''Maida's Little Shop 1910, Huebsch - children's | |||
Available online at Project Gutenberg. | |||
* ''Phoebe and Ernest 1910, Holt - originally serialized by American Magazine, for young people. Illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz. | |||
* ''Janey: being the record of a short interval in the journey through life and the struggle with society of a little girl of nine 1911, Holt | |||
* ''"The Eternal Challenge" Everybody's Magazine, Jan. 1912 | |||
* ''"With Pitfall and With Gin" (short story) Pictorial Review, Feb. 1912 | |||
* ''Phoebe, Ernest, and Cupid 1912, Holt. Illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz. | |||
* ''Angel Island 1914, Holt; reprinted 1978, Arno; re-released 1988, NAL Plume with an introduction by Ursula K. Le Guin | |||
Review on the Feminist SF/F/U Page | |||
Available online (public domain) | |||
* ''The Ollivant Orphans'' 1915, Holt | |||
* ''"The Woman Across the Street" (short story) | |||
Ladies Home Journal, Sept. 1916 | |||
* ''"The Sixth Canvassar" (short story) | |||
The Century, Jan. 1916 | |||
Republished in What Did Miss Darrington See?: An Anthology Feminist Supernatural Fiction, ed. Jessica Amanda Salmonson, 1989 | |||
* ''The Californiacs | |||
1916, A. M. Robertson - travel. Available online with Project Gutenberg. | |||
* ''The Lady of Kingdoms | |||
1917, George H. Doran - working-class feminist novel | |||
* ''The Happy Years | |||
1919, Holt | |||
* ''The Native Son | |||
1919, A. M. Robertson - also about California | |||
Available online at Project Gutenberg. | |||
* ''Out of the Air | |||
1921, Harcourt | |||
* ''Maida's Little House | |||
1921, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''The Story of the Women's Party | |||
1921, Harcourt; published as Up Hill With Banners Flying, 1964, Traversity Press; original edition reprinted 1971, Kraus Reprint | |||
- history of the suffragists | |||
* ''"The Last Cartridge" | |||
(ss) McCall's Oct. 1922 | |||
* ''The Lost Diana | |||
(novella) Everybody's Magazine Jun 1923 | |||
* "The Spring Flight" | |||
1924 - short story. Won O. Henry Memorial Prize, 1924. | |||
* "The Irish Language | |||
(ss) Everybody's Magazine Jul 1925 | |||
* ''Discarded | |||
(serial segment) The American Magazine May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov 1925 | |||
* ''Gertrude Haviland's Divorce | |||
1925, Harper | |||
* ''Maida's Little School | |||
1926, Viking Press. | |||
* ''Gideon | |||
1927, Harper | |||
* ''P.D.F.R.: A New Novel | |||
1928, Harper | |||
Family Circle | |||
1931, Bobbs-Merrill | |||
* ''Youth Must Laugh | |||
1932, Bobbs-Merrill | |||
* ''Angels and Amazons: A Hundred Years of American Women | |||
1933, Doubleday; reprinted 1974, Arno | |||
* ''Strange Harvest | |||
1934, Bobbs-Merrill | |||
* ''Murder Masquerade | |||
1935, H. Smith & R. Haas - murder mystery | |||
* ''Little Miss Redhead | |||
1936, Lothrop - self-illustrated | |||
* ''The Poison Cross Mystery | |||
1936, H. Smith & R. Haas | |||
* ''Good Manners for Girls | |||
1937, Appleton-Century | |||
* ''A Body Rolled Downstairs | |||
1938, Random House - murder mystery | |||
* ''"You Bet I Am!" (article) | |||
Woman's Day, Oct. 1938 | |||
* ''Maida's Little Island | |||
1939, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Camp | |||
1940, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Many Murders | |||
1941, Random House | |||
* ''Peter and Cynthia | |||
1941, Lothrop - self-illustrated. | |||
questionable - need to have title verified | |||
* ''Maida's Little Village | |||
1942, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Houseboat | |||
1943, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Theater | |||
1946, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''The Women Swore Revenge | |||
1946, Random House | |||
* ''Maida's Little Cabins | |||
1947, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Zoo | |||
1949, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Lighthouse | |||
1951, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Hospital | |||
1952, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Farm | |||
1953, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little House Party | |||
1954, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Maida's Little Treasure Hunt | |||
1955, Grosset - children's | |||
* ''Adventures of Yesterday 1973, General Microfilm - autobiography. | |||
* Why the Woman's Party Is for It, (ar) Good Housekeeping Mar 1924 | |||
* Over the Horizon— On Wheels" (ss) Colliers, June 20, 1925 | |||
* "Street Episode", (ss) Liberty Magazine Apr 20 1929 | |||
* Freesia, (ss) The American Magazine Sep 1929 | |||
* The Perpetual Substitute, (ss) The American Magazine Oct 1929 | |||
* Rebound, (ss) The American Magazine Mar 1930 | |||
* Night of the Pact, (ss) Pictorial Review Mar 1930 | |||
* Middle Sister, (ss) Pictorial Review Apr 1932 | |||
* Betty Cleans Up, (ss) Good Housekeeping May 1932 | |||
* Second Choice, (ar) Liberty Magazine Jan 8 1938 | |||
* "Time", (ar) Cosmopolitan Jul 1938 | |||
* Some Call It Extra Sensory Perception, (ar) Cosmopolitan Mar 1939 | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
Revision as of 13:29, 19 March 2007
Inez Haynes Gillmore Irwin was a writer and feminist. Her writing includes history, journalism, editorial work, novels (science fiction, mystery, fiction, children's books), short stories, and juvenile stories (the Maida books).[1]
Biography
Born Inez Haynes, March 2, 1873, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Her parents (Gideon Haynes and Emma Jane Hopkins Haynes) were from Boston and returned there while Gillmore was raised. She became involved in the women's suffrage movement at Radcliffe (1897-1900) and belonged to the National Women's Party advisory council. Her first husband, Rufus Gillmore (m. 8/30/1897), was a newspaperman who supported her feminism. Their marriage ultimately ended in divorce. Shortly after her first novel was published she became fiction editor for The Masses, a left-wing magazine. She lived in New York for much of her life. She and her second husband, Will(iam Henry) Irwin (m. 2/1/1916) lived in Europe reporting on World War I. She retired to Scituate, Massachusetts after Irwin's death in 1948. She died September 25, 1970.
Her niece, Phyllis Duganne, 1899-1976, was also a writer and suffragist. Her papers are available at Smith College in the Sophia Smith Collection. See http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss87.html.
Generally listed as Inez Haynes Gillmore, but may also be listed as Inez Haynes Irwin.
Inez Haynes' diaries, manuscripts, letters, etc., available at the Yale Archives. Some materials also available on microfilm at the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe, Harvard (M-59; Research Publications, Inc., History of Women, 1975-1979. 24 reels, #966-970, 973-983, 988-995. See http://www.radcliffe.edu/schles/services/microfilm.php . Also the diary from Feb. 19, 1916-Oct. 26, 1916, and her preliminary notes to her autobiography are available at Cornell.
Profiled in Time, Oct. 8, 1923, Vol. II, No. 6, "Their Wives Are Literary, Too," as wife of Will Irwin.
- Their Wives Are Literary, Too Wallace (47) and Will Irwin (50) are brothers of more popular success, certainly, than the poetic Benet brothers (TIME, Oct. 1). Of late years Will Irwin has devoted much of his time to the spreading of peace propaganda throughout the U. S. Wallace has been busy writing short stories and novels. His latest, Lew Tyler's Wives, is a study of the two marriages of one delightful but irresponsible gentleman.Their wives, too, are of the literary persuasion: Inez Haynes Irwin writes girls' stories and novels, and Mrs. Wallace Irwin writes plays, to say nothing of Mr....
Associations
- Author's Guild of America, President, 1931-1933 (1925-1928?)
- Author's Guild of America, Vice-President, 1930-1931
- National Collegiate Equal Suffrage League (co-founder)
- Chairman of Board of Directors of the World Center for Women's Archives 1936-1938/1940.
- Member of American committee of Prix Femina, 1931-1933
- Member, Cosmpolitan
- Member, Heterodoxy
- Member, Query
Bibliography
- Angel Island (1914)
- "The Father of His Son" (short story) Everybody's Magazine, July 1904
- "A Doorstep Introduction" (short story) Pearson's Magazine, Nov. 1904
- "Love Me, Love My Dog" (short story) Pearson's Magazine, Nov. 1904
- "The Start" (short story) Everybody's Magazine, Dec. 1904
- "The Matchbreakers" (short story) Hampton's Broadway Magazine, Nov. 1908
- June Jeopardy 1908, Huebsch - first novel
- Maida's Little Shop 1910, Huebsch - children's
Available online at Project Gutenberg.
- Phoebe and Ernest 1910, Holt - originally serialized by American Magazine, for young people. Illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz.
- Janey: being the record of a short interval in the journey through life and the struggle with society of a little girl of nine 1911, Holt
- "The Eternal Challenge" Everybody's Magazine, Jan. 1912
- "With Pitfall and With Gin" (short story) Pictorial Review, Feb. 1912
- Phoebe, Ernest, and Cupid 1912, Holt. Illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz.
- Angel Island 1914, Holt; reprinted 1978, Arno; re-released 1988, NAL Plume with an introduction by Ursula K. Le Guin
Review on the Feminist SF/F/U Page Available online (public domain)
- The Ollivant Orphans 1915, Holt
- "The Woman Across the Street" (short story)
Ladies Home Journal, Sept. 1916
- "The Sixth Canvassar" (short story)
The Century, Jan. 1916 Republished in What Did Miss Darrington See?: An Anthology Feminist Supernatural Fiction, ed. Jessica Amanda Salmonson, 1989
- The Californiacs
1916, A. M. Robertson - travel. Available online with Project Gutenberg.
- The Lady of Kingdoms
1917, George H. Doran - working-class feminist novel
- The Happy Years
1919, Holt
- The Native Son
1919, A. M. Robertson - also about California Available online at Project Gutenberg.
- Out of the Air
1921, Harcourt
- Maida's Little House
1921, Grosset - children's
- The Story of the Women's Party
1921, Harcourt; published as Up Hill With Banners Flying, 1964, Traversity Press; original edition reprinted 1971, Kraus Reprint - history of the suffragists
- "The Last Cartridge"
(ss) McCall's Oct. 1922
- The Lost Diana
(novella) Everybody's Magazine Jun 1923
- "The Spring Flight"
1924 - short story. Won O. Henry Memorial Prize, 1924.
- "The Irish Language
(ss) Everybody's Magazine Jul 1925
- Discarded
(serial segment) The American Magazine May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov 1925
- Gertrude Haviland's Divorce
1925, Harper
- Maida's Little School
1926, Viking Press.
- Gideon
1927, Harper
- P.D.F.R.: A New Novel
1928, Harper Family Circle 1931, Bobbs-Merrill
- Youth Must Laugh
1932, Bobbs-Merrill
- Angels and Amazons: A Hundred Years of American Women
1933, Doubleday; reprinted 1974, Arno
- Strange Harvest
1934, Bobbs-Merrill
- Murder Masquerade
1935, H. Smith & R. Haas - murder mystery
- Little Miss Redhead
1936, Lothrop - self-illustrated
- The Poison Cross Mystery
1936, H. Smith & R. Haas
- Good Manners for Girls
1937, Appleton-Century
- A Body Rolled Downstairs
1938, Random House - murder mystery
- "You Bet I Am!" (article)
Woman's Day, Oct. 1938
- Maida's Little Island
1939, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Camp
1940, Grosset - children's
- Many Murders
1941, Random House
- Peter and Cynthia
1941, Lothrop - self-illustrated. questionable - need to have title verified
- Maida's Little Village
1942, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Houseboat
1943, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Theater
1946, Grosset - children's
- The Women Swore Revenge
1946, Random House
- Maida's Little Cabins
1947, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Zoo
1949, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Lighthouse
1951, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Hospital
1952, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Farm
1953, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little House Party
1954, Grosset - children's
- Maida's Little Treasure Hunt
1955, Grosset - children's
- Adventures of Yesterday 1973, General Microfilm - autobiography.
- Why the Woman's Party Is for It, (ar) Good Housekeeping Mar 1924
- Over the Horizon— On Wheels" (ss) Colliers, June 20, 1925
- "Street Episode", (ss) Liberty Magazine Apr 20 1929
- Freesia, (ss) The American Magazine Sep 1929
- The Perpetual Substitute, (ss) The American Magazine Oct 1929
- Rebound, (ss) The American Magazine Mar 1930
- Night of the Pact, (ss) Pictorial Review Mar 1930
- Middle Sister, (ss) Pictorial Review Apr 1932
- Betty Cleans Up, (ss) Good Housekeeping May 1932
- Second Choice, (ar) Liberty Magazine Jan 8 1938
- "Time", (ar) Cosmopolitan Jul 1938
- Some Call It Extra Sensory Perception, (ar) Cosmopolitan Mar 1939
Further reading
References
- ↑ Preface, Angel Island, 1988 ed.