Women writers of the Harlem Renaissance movement of the 1920s, including poets, playwrights, essayists, novelists, and editors.| Literary Ladies Guide
Literary gift boxes are a fun and thoughtful way to celebrate great books and authors. These boxes are perfect for book lovers.| Literary Ladies Guide
Overview of Toni Morrison as editor and publisher, which was hugely influential in contemporary Black literature and the publishing world.| Literary Ladies Guide
These trailblazing ibrarians built diversity and cultural awareness into the fabric of what has evolved into the contemporary library.| Literary Ladies Guide
Learn about fascinating women of the past through novelizations of their lives, now widely known as the genre of biofiction.| Literary Ladies Guide
Edna St. Vincent Millay was just nineteen when she began to compose “Renascence” some time toward the end of 1911. Written at a time of uncertainty about her future, it was a poem about herself, yet it dealt with the common human struggle to find hope when everything seems hopeless. She had been an outstanding student in her tiny Maine high school, and a star contributor to the popular children’s publication St. Nicholas Magazine. Once she had passed the age limit (eighteen) for submis...| Literary Ladies Guide
Great 1925 fiction by women writers, including Virginia Woolf, Zora Neale Hurston, Willa Cather, Anita Loos, & Anzia Yezierska.| Literary Ladies Guide
A wide array of essays musing on the works of classic women authors who wrote in the English language or who were translated.| Literary Ladies Guide
It's incredible (and sad) that we're still grappling with the same issues presented in these five 1920s novels by women writers.| Literary Ladies Guide
Fascinating facts about Ursula Parrott (1899 – 1957) bestselling author who was best known for her first novel, Ex-Wife (1929).| Literary Ladies Guide
Poetry samples and collections by classic women authors, mainly British and American writing in the English language.| Literary Ladies Guide