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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:List_of_English_writers_(K–Q)
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dbr:Olive_Moore
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yago:Wikicat20th-centuryBritishNovelists yago:LivingThing100004258 yago:YagoLegalActor yago:YagoLegalActorGeo yago:Communicator109610660 yago:Object100002684 yago:Essayist110064405 yago:Whole100003553 yago:Organism100004475 owl:Thing yago:Wikicat20th-centuryEnglishWriters yago:WikicatWomenEssayists yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:Novelist110363573 yago:WikicatPeopleFromHereford yago:Person100007846 yago:CausalAgent100007347 dbo:Person yago:Writer110794014 yago:WikicatEnglishWomenNovelists
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Olive Moore
rdfs:comment
Constance Edith Vaughan (September 1904 – ca. 1970), better known by her pseudonym Olive Moore, was a modernist English writer best known for three well-esteemed novels: Celestial Seraglio (1929), Spleen (1930), and Fugue (1932), and for the acerbic essay collection The Apple Is Bitten Again (1934). She also produced an essay on D.H. Lawrence, entitled Further Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine, which was privately printed in 1933 and included in her essay collection. Her Collected Writings was published in 1992.
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Constance Edith Vaughan (September 1904 – ca. 1970), better known by her pseudonym Olive Moore, was a modernist English writer best known for three well-esteemed novels: Celestial Seraglio (1929), Spleen (1930), and Fugue (1932), and for the acerbic essay collection The Apple Is Bitten Again (1934). She also produced an essay on D.H. Lawrence, entitled Further Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine, which was privately printed in 1933 and included in her essay collection. Her Collected Writings was published in 1992.
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