The Female Short Story - A Chronological History - Volume 5: Marion Hepworth Dixon to Ada Radford

The Female Short Story - A Chronological History - Volume 5: Marion Hepworth Dixon to Ada Radford

Title: The Female Short Story - A Chronological History - Volume 5: Marion Hepworth Dixon to Ada Radford
Author: Vernon Lee, Edith Nesbit & Katharine Tynan
Release: 2021-05-11
Kind: audiobook
Genre: Fiction
Preview Intro
1
The Female Short Story - A Chronological Vernon Lee, Edith Nesbit & Katharine Tynan
A wise man once said ‘The safest place for a child is in the arms of his mother’s voice’. This is a perfect place to start our anthology of female short stories.
Some of our earliest memories are of our mothers telling us bedtime stories. This is not to demote the value of fathers but more to promote the often-overshadowed talents of the gentler sex.

Perhaps ‘gentler’ is a word that we should re-evaluate. In the course of literary history it is men who dominated by opportunity and with their stranglehold on the resources, both financial and technological, who brought their words to a wider audience. Men often placed women on a pedestal from where their talented words would not threaten their own.

In these stories we begin with the original disrupter and renegade author Aphra Behn. A peek at her c.v. shows an astounding capacity and leaves us wondering at just how she did all that.

In those less modern days to be a woman, even ennobled, was to be seen as second class. You literally were chattel and had almost no rights in marriage. As Charlotte Smith famously said your role as wife was little more than ‘legal prostitute’. From such a despicable place these authors have used their talents and ideas and helped redress that situation.

Slowly at first. Privately printed, often anonymously or under the cloak of a male pseudonym their words spread. Their stories admired and, usually, their role still obscured from rightful acknowledgement.

Aided by more advanced technology, the 1700’s began to see a steady stream of female writers until by the 1900’s mass market publishing saw short stories by female authors from all the strata of society being avidly read by everyone. Their names are a rollcall of talent and ‘can do’ spirit and society is richer for their works.

In literature at least women are now acknowledged as equals, true behind the scenes little has changed but if (and to mis-quote Jane Austen) there is one universal truth, it is that ideas change society. These women’s most certainly did and will continue to do so as they easily write across genres, from horror and ghost stories to tender tales of love and making your way in society’s often grueling rut. They will not be silenced, their ideas and passion move emotions, thoughts and perhaps more importantly our ingrained view of what every individual human being is capable of.

It is because of their desire to speak out, their desire to add their talents to the bias around them that we perhaps live in more enlightened, almost equal, times.

Within these stories you will also find very occasional examples of historical prejudice. A few words here and there which in today’s world some may find inappropriate or even offensive. It is not our intention to make anyone uncomfortable but to show that the world in order to change must reconcile itself to the actual truth rather than put it out of sight. Context is everything, both to understand and to illuminate the path forward. The author’s words are set, our reaction to them encourages our change.

01 - The Female Short Story. A Chronological History - An Introduction - Volume 5

02 - The Death Mask by H D Everett writing as Theo Parker

03 - The Story of 'The Spaniards', Hammersmith by Kate and Hesketh Pritchard

04 - A New England Nun by Mary E Wilkins Freeman

05 - A Dream of Wild Bees by Olive Schreiner

06 - The Hired Baby, A Romance of the London Streets by Mary Mackay writing as Marie Corelli

07 - The Runaway by Marion Hepworth-Dixon

08 - Amour Dure by Violet Paget writing as Vernon Lee

09 - My Flirtations by Ella Hepworth Dixon writing as Margaret Wynham

10 - Irremediable by Ella D'Arcy

11 - When the Devil Was Well by Gertrude Ather

More from Vernon Lee, Edith Nesbit & Katharine Tynan

Washington Irving, H. P. Lovecraft, Charlotte P Gilman, John Polidori, Edgar Allan Poe, Vernon Lee, Nathaniel Hawthorne & F. Marion Crawford
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Vernon Lee, H. P. Lovecraft & Robert E. Howard
Louisa May Alcott, Vernon Lee, Algernon Blackwood, Amelia Edwards, Anatole France, Edith Nesbit, Fernan Caballeron, Hume Nisbit, Miguel de Cervantes, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nikolai Gogol, Robert Barr, Rudyard Kipling & Sheridan Le Fanu
Vernon Lee
Vernon Lee
George Eliot, Edith Wharton, Vernon Lee, Edith Nesbit, Sarah Orne Jewett, Violet Hunt, Mary Cholmondeley, Catherine Crowe, Elinor Mordaunt, Clotilde Graves & Violet Paget writing as Vernon Lee
Vernon Lee
H. G. Wells, Edgar Allan Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, Arthur Conan Doyle, Alexander Pushkin, E. F. Benson, Guy de Maupassant, Edward Lucas White, Bram Stoker, W. F. Harvey, Violet Mary Firth writng as Dion Fortune, Ulric Daubeny, Hume Nisbet & Vernon Lee
Vernon Lee
Edith Nesbit, Lady Eleanor Smith, Beatrice Heron-Maxwell, Amelia Edwards, Lettice Galbraith, Rhoda Broughton, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Mary Cholmondeley & Vernon Lee
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Mary Shelley, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Lettice Galbraith, Edith Nesbit, H D Everett writing as Theo Parker, Charlotte Riddell, Bessie Kyffin Taylor, Lady Eleanor Smith, Helen Simpson, Amelia Edwards, Sarah Orne Jewett & Vernon Lee
Edgar Allan Poe, H. G. Wells, Amelia Edwards, E. F. Benson, Edith Wharton, F. Marion Crawford, Frank R. Stockton, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Richard Garnett, Vernon Lee, Willa Cather & William Mudford
Vernon Lee
Edith Nesbit, Edith Wharton, Amelia Edwards, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Clotilde Graves, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Mrs Ellen Wood, Rhoda Broughton, Rosa Mulholland, Clara Venn, Catherine Wells, Hesba Stretton, Madeline Yale Wynne, Margaret Oliphant, B. M. Croker, Mary Cholmondeley, Marion Hepworth-Dixon, May Sinclair, Gertrude Atherton, Mary Austin, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Elizabeth Gaskell & Vernon Lee
Henry James, D. H. Lawrence, Vladimir Korolenko, Mary Cholmondeley.wav, Frederick Cowles, Anatole France, Alexander Kuprin, Leonid Andreyev, Alicia Ramsay, Mary Butts, Vernon Lee, W. F. Harvey, F. G. Loring, Honoré de Balzac & R. H. Malden