Grace Denio Litchfield
Grace Denio Litchfield (November 19, 1849 – December 4, 1944) was an American poet and novelist. She was born in Brooklyn Heights in New York City on November 19, 1849 to Grace Hill Litchfield and Edwin Litchfield, an attorney. Much of her early years were spent in Europe. Her first book, Only an Incident, was published in 1883, although she had begun writing much earlier. Her account of an earthquake on the French Riviera, In the Crucible, was published in 1897. Her poems and stories were published in many popular magazines of the day, including Harper's and the Atlantic. Eventually returning to the United States, she lived in Washington D.C. for fifty years.[1] She also kept a summer home on Central New York's Lake Minnewaska. Litchfield died in Goshen, New York on December 4, 1944.
Notes
Bibliography
- Only an Incident (1883)
- Criss-Cross (1885)
- The Knight of the Black Forest (1885)
- A Hard-won Victory (1888)
- Little Venice and Other Stories (1890)
- Little He and She (1893)
- Mimosa Leaves: Poems (1895)
- In the Crucible (1897)
- The Moving Finger Writes (1900)
- Vita: a Drama (1904)
- The Letter D (1904)
- The Supreme Gift (1908)
- Baldur the Beautiful (1910)
- The Nun of Kent: a Drama in Five Acts (1911)
- Collected Poems (1913)
- The Song of the Sirens (1917)
- As a Man Sows and Other Stories (1926)
External links
- The Grace Denio Litchfield Collection at Johns Hopkins University
- Works by Grace Denio Litchfield at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Grace Denio Litchfield at Internet Archive