Mrs. Lynn Linton is of the rebellious school . . . and prone to see nothing but problems and difficulties in life, whether in the, case of the unappreciated daughter or wife, or in other and more complicated religious or social matters. Conflicts of both kinds are apt to form the groundwork of her novels. One of these, however, "Joshua Davidson," which aroused a good deal of interest in its time, is occupied with the attempt to represent the life of Jesus Christ under modern conditions, an attempt which must always strike the general reader somewhat profane as well as singulariy futile. — Mrs. Oliphant, The Victorian Age in Literature (1892)

Bibliography

Anderson, Nancy Fix. "Linton, Eliza Lynn (1822-1898)." The Victorian Encyclopedia, ed. Sally Mitchell. New York: Garland, 1988.

—. Woman against Women in Victorian England. Bloomington, IN: Indiana U. P., 1987.

Cousin, John William. A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature . London: J. M. Dent & sons; New York: E. P. Dutton, 1910.

"Eliza Lynn Linton [1822-1898]." Online Encyclopedia. Rpt. From Encyclopedia Britannica (1911), Vol. 16, p. 736. Accessed 17 January 2008. http://encyclopedia.jrank/LEO_LOB/LINTON_ELIZA_LYNN_ 1822_1898_.html

"Eliza Lynn Linton." Wikipedia. Accessed 17 January 2008. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki /Eliza_Lynn_Linton

"Linton, Eliza Lynn: February 10, 1822-July 14, 1898." Accessed 17 January 2008. http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~ulrich/RHE309/vicfembios/ elizallinton.htm

"Mrs. Lynn Linton." "Saturday Review of Books and Art." The New York Times. 30 July 1898. BR 511.

Spender, Dale, and Janet Todd, eds. British Women Writers: An Anthology from the Fourteenth Century to the Present. New York: Peter Bedrick, 1989.

Thompson, Dorothea M. "Eliza Lynn Linton." Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 18: Victorian Novelists After 1885. Ed. Ira B. Nadel and William E. Fredeman. Detroit: The Gale Group and Bruccoli Clark Layman, 1983. 153-158.


Last modified 6 March 2008