释义 |
- Bibliography
- References
- External links
Grace S. Richmond (née Grace Louise Smith; Pawtucket, Rhode Island, 1866{{spaced ndash}}1959) was an American writer. She wrote the "Red Pepper Burns" series of popular novels. Her father was a Baptist clergyman, Charles Edward Smith.[1]Bibliography- The Indifference of Juliet (1905)
- The Second Violin (1906)
- A Court of Inquiry (1909)
- Mrs. Red Pepper (1913)
- Red Pepper Burns (1910)
- Round the Corner in Gay Street (1908)
- Strawberry Acres (1911)
- Twenty-fourth of June (1914)
- Under the Country Sky
- With Juliet in England
- The Brown Study (1919)
- Red Pepper's Patients (1917)
- Brotherly House
- Red and Black (1919)
- Rufus (1923)
- On Christmas Day in the Evening
- On Christmas Day in the Morning (1908)
- The Second Violin (1906)
- [https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20131015 Red of the Redfields] (1924)
- Foursquare (1922)
- [https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20131016 Cherry Square: A Neighbourly Novel] (1926)
- [https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20150318 High Fences] (1930)
References1. ^The women who make our novels Page 270 Grant Martin Overton - 1928 "As a clergyman's daughter and a physician's wife, the suggestions for Redfield Pepper Burns and Robert McPherson Black must have come very naturally to her. These two — the generous, red-haired, impulsive and humane doctor and the ..."
External links{{Portal|Biography}}- {{Gutenberg author |id=Richmond,+Grace+S.+(Grace+Smith) | name=Grace Smith Richmond}}
- {{FadedPage|id=Richmond, Grace S.|name=Grace S. Richmond|author=yes}}
- {{Internet Archive author |sname=Grace Smith Richmond}}
- {{Librivox author |id=10819}}
- {{Find a Grave|8206521}}
- http://www.online-literature.com/grace-richmond/
{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Richmond, Grace S.}}{{US-novelist-1860s-stub}} 8 : 19th-century American novelists|1866 births|1959 deaths|People from Pawtucket, Rhode Island|20th-century American novelists|20th-century American women writers|American women novelists|19th-century American women writers |