STUDIES AND REVIEWS
Rittenhouse.
Untermeyer.
+Agnes Repplier+--essayist.
Born at Philadelphia, 1858, of French extraction. Educated at the Sacred Heart Convent, Torresdale, Pennsylvania. Litt. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1902. Has traveled much in Europe. Roman Catholic.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books and Men. 1888.
Points of View. 1891.
Essays in Miniature. 1892.
Essays in Idleness. 1893.
In the Dozy Hours. 1894.
Varia. 1897.
The Fireside Sphinx. 1901.
Compromises. 1904.
In Our Convent Days. 1905.
A Happy Half Century. 1908.
Americans and Others. 1912.
The Cat. 1912. (Compilation.) Counter Currents. 1915.
Points of Friction. 1920.
STUDIES AND REVIEWS
Halsey. (Women.) Pattee.
Critic, 45 ("04): 302; 47 ("05): 204. (Portraits).
Lit. Digest, 48 ("14): 827 (portrait).
Lond. Times, Aug. 10, 1916: 378.
New Repub. 7 ("16): 20. (Francis Hackett.) New Statesman, 7 ("16): 597.
Outlook, 78 ("04): 880 (portrait).
Spec. 117 ("16): 105.
+Alice (Caldwell) Hegan Rice (Mrs. Cale Young Rice)+--novelist.
Born at Shelbyville, Kentucky, 1870. Educated in private schools. One of the founders of the Cabbage Patch Settlement House, Louisville. Uses her own experience in charity work in her books.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. 1901.
Lovey Mary. 1903.
Sandy. 1905.
Captain June. 1907.
Mr. Opp. 1909.
A Romance of Billy Goat Hill. 1912.
The Honorable Percival. 1914.
Calvary Alley. 1917.
Miss Mink"s Soldier and Other Stories. 1918.
Turn About Tales. 1920. (With Cale Young Rice, q.v.) Quin. 1921.
STUDIES AND REVIEWS
Overton.
Bookm. 29 ("09): 412; 32 ("10): 369.
Bookm. (Lond.) 24 ("03): 158 (portrait), 160.
Outlook, 72 ("02): 802 (portrait); 78 ("04): 282, 286 (portrait).
See also _Book Review Digest_, 1905, 1907, 1909, 1912, 1918.
+Cale Young Rice+ (Kentucky, 1872)--poet, dramatist.
Collected Plays and Poems. 1915.
For later volumes, cf. _Who"s Who in America_.
+Lola Ridge+--poet, critic.
Born at Dublin, Ireland, but brought up in Sydney, Australia. As a child, lived also in New Zealand, but studied art in Australia. In 1907 she came to the United States and supported herself for three years by writing fiction for the popular magazines. But finding that this work was going to kill her creative ability, she earned her living in a variety of other ways--as organizer, advertis.e.m.e.nt writer, ill.u.s.trator, artist"s model, factory worker, etc.--while she wrote poems. Her reputation was made by the publication of _The Ghetto_ in 1918.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Ghetto and Other Poems. 1918.
Sun-up and Other Poems. 1920.
Also in: Others, 1919.
STUDIES AND REVIEWS
Untermeyer.
Dial, 66 ("18): 83. (Aiken.) New Repub. 17 ("18): 76. (Hackett.) Poetry, 13 ("19): 335; 17 ("21): 332.
See also _Book Review Digest_, 1918, 1920.