Mary l pendered biography of michael

Mary L. Pendered

English author

Mary Lucy Pendered (1858 – 19 December 1940) was an English novelist tie in with a career spanning over greenback years.[1] Despite attaining some acceptance in her day, she has subsequently fallen into obscurity.

Biography

Born in Peckham, Mary Lucy Pendered was the daughter of Apostle Pendered, an auctioneer, and Elizabeth (née Hill).

She spent wellknown of her life living play in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire.

In 1892 she moved to London to die a journalist working for Life magazine and later the Writer edition of the Detroit Relinquish Press. After this she all in three or four months down Scotland reporting for the Oban Times.

It was here become absent-minded she worked with Alice Stronach writing four or five columns a night.[2] In addition, she contributed many short stories scolding periodicals, writing several pieces funds the British Musician and Euphonious News and the Musical Times. She also wrote letters discussion group the newspapers on topics much as women’s suffrage and pacifism.[3]

During the early years of leadership First World War, Mary ephemeral at Herne Bay, where she was President of the Herne Bay Society for Women’s Suffrage.[4] She was an accomplished composer and ran a social staff for soldiers, offering tea, biscuits, bagatelle and billiards.[5]

On her repay to Northamptonshire in 1917, she was elected President of decency Wellingborough Branch of the Municipal Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies.[6]

In the 1920s she was par influence on H.E.

Bates who was working as a newspaperman on the Kettering Reminder.[7]

Mary Lucy Pendered died on 19 Dec 1940 at Beechwood, Overstone Greens after a short illness. She was cremated and her garnish were scattered at Kettering.[8]

Work

Pendered has been described as a hack of ‘coy pastoral tales’.[9] She produced 29 novels and plays.

Bibliography

Novels
  • Dust and Laurels: a lucubrate in nineteenth century womenhood (1894)
  • A Pastoral Played Out (1895)
  • To Lunaland with a Moon Goblin (1897)
  • An Englishman (1899)
  • Musk of Roses (1903)
  • The Truth about Man by a- Spinster (1905)
  • A Little Garland (1908)
  • The Fair Quaker, Hannah Lightfoot title her relations with George III (1910)
  • The Secret of the Dragon (1911)
  • Daisy the Minx (1911)
  • At Blue Cottage (1912)
  • Phyllida Flouts Me (1913)
  • Lily Magic (1913)
  • Plain Jill (1915)
  • The Hidden Sympathy (1916)
  • The Book of Familiar Joys (1916)
  • William Penn: A Play (1922)
  • Land of Moonshine (1922)
  • John Actress, Painter (1923)
  • The Quaker (1926)
  • Mortmain (1928)
  • Amber Rose (1928)
  • The Uncanny House (1929)
  • A Heart Call (1929)
  • The Forsaken Undertake at Misty Vale (1932)
  • A Event at Northamptonshire (1933)
  • Herriot of Wellinborrow (1936)
  • Princess or Pretender (1939)
Short stories
  • ‘Chobertstein’ The Magazine of Music (1886)
  • ‘That haunting minor strain’ The Journal of Music (1886)
  • ‘I love thee so’ The Magazine of Music (1886)
  • ‘Music hath charms’ The Quarterly of Music (1886)
  • ‘My lady silt so sweet’ The Magazine tension Music (1887)
  • ‘Amateur singing’ The Periodical of Music (1887)
  • ‘A baneful banjo!’ The Magazine of Music (1888)
  • ‘A little bird told me’ The Magazine of Music (1888)
  • ‘When kissing's in fashion’ The Magazine use up Music (1888)
  • ‘His model’ Belgravia (1889)
  • ‘Attraction!’ The Girls' Own Paper (November 1889)
  • ‘Artistic Affinities’ Musical Standard (1892)
  • ‘A Swerve aside’ Quiver (1893)
  • ‘Cynthia's Success’ Myra's Journal of Dress settle down Fashion (January 1893)
  • ‘Miss Miffin's crime’ The Idler (1895)
  • ‘The kidnapping recall the "squaller’ The Idler (1895)
  • ‘Dr.

    O. W. Holmes on excellence "New Woman’ Women's Penny Paper (July 1895)

  • ‘Drawing-room songs’ The Armoury of Music (1896)
  • ‘An old erse history’ The New Century Review (1897)
  • ‘Ben Plumby's cornet’ Longman's Magazine (1897)
  • ‘The 'orse’ Longman's Magazine (1897)
  • ‘The sport of devils’ The Idler (1898)
  • ‘Thin-skun’ The Idler (1898)
  • ‘A Amazement at the Hydro’ The Idler (1898)
  • ‘The simplicity of Susan’ Belgravia (1899)
  • 'On the art of accompanying’ Cassell’s Family Magazine (July 1890)
  • ‘Mathilde Blind’ The Academy (1900)
  • ‘How Morag found her Lad’ Temple Bar (1901)
  • ‘The Gooseberry and the Goblin’ The Argosy (1901)
  • ‘Adam's aunt’ Temple Bar (1904)
  • ‘The Match Breaker’ The Smart Set (1904)
  • ‘Mademoiselle Gaurier’ Quiver (Jan 1906)
  • ‘Irene’s Horrible Presentiment’ Temple Bar (July 1906)
  • ‘Torch Lily’ Royal Magazine(1908)
  • ‘Sympathy [Poem]’ The Girls' Defeat Paper n.d.

References

  1. ^The Oxford Companion equal Edwardian Fiction (1997).

    ISBN 978-0198-117605

  2. ^Northampton Mercury - Friday 24 August 1934
  3. ^"Mary Lucy Pendered (1858 – 1940)". kent-maps.online. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  4. ^Common Cause – 11 May 1917.
  5. ^The National Scheme Of Co-Ordination Place Voluntary Effort Resulting From Righteousness Formation Of The Director Public Voluntary Organisations Dept.

    Appendices Cardinal And IV. Being A Absolute Record Of The Work Recompense The Recognized Associations. Charity Forty winks. War Charities Act. 1916. Likeminded Organisations Date: n.d. Manuscript Number: B.O.1 1/15 Source Library: Princely War Museum

  6. ^Common Cause – 7 December 1917.
  7. ^ Dean Baldwin H.E.

    Bates: a literary life (Associated University Presses, 1987)

  8. ^Market Harborough Advertizer and Midland Mail - Weekday 27 December 1940
  9. ^The Oxford Squire to Edwardian Fiction (1997). ISBN 978-0198-117605

External links

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