Sir George Tressady is a novel by Mary Augusta Ward. Originally published as a serial from 1895 to 1896, it was Ward's seventh novel.
This is the book that Miss Adeline Glendower, the elder of the Glendower half-sisters, has chosen for her seaside reading in The Sea Lady, a social satire by H. G. Wells.
Notes
Further reading
- "Another Tract for the Times," The Book Buyer, Vol. 13, No. 10, 1896, pp. 641âÂÂ642.
- "Mrs. Ward's New Novel," The Athenaeum, No. 3596, 1896, pp. 413âÂÂ414.
- "Sir George Tressady," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 78, No. 470, 1896, pp. 841âÂÂ843.
- Cooper, J.A. (1896). "Mrs. Ward's New Novel: A Review," The Canadian Magazine, Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 179âÂÂ181.
- Elliot, Arthur D. (1897). "Sir George Tressady," The Edinburgh Review, Vol. 185, No. 379, pp. 84âÂÂ109.
- Gilder, Jeannette L. (1896). "Shows Mrs. WardâÂÂs Gifts," The Chicago Sunday Tribune, 27 September 1896, p. 33.
- Rives, Françoise (1974). "Fiction and Politics in Sir George Tressady." In: Politics in Literature in the Nineteenth Century. Ed. Janie Teissedou. Lille, France: Univ. de Lille III, pp. 185âÂÂ202.
- Traill, H.D. (1896). "Sir George Tressady and the Political Novel," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. 60, No. 359, pp. 703âÂÂ714 (rep. in The Living Age, Vol. 211, No. 2735, 1896, pp. 647âÂÂ656.)
- Woods, Katharine Pearson (1896). "Mrs. Ward and 'The New Woman'," The Bookman, Vol. 4, pp. 245âÂÂ247.
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