Amelia Perrier

Amelia Perrier (1841 – 1875) was an Irish novelist and travel writer.

Amelia Perrier
Born1841
Died1875
NationalityIrish

Early life and education

Amelia Perrier was born to John Johnston Perrier and Anna Browne in 1841 in Cork (city). Her father was a barrister in Cork but after he died, the family moved to London. Perrier worked as a journalist and novelist. Initially the novels she wrote received positive reviews but her health began to fail after the death of her brother in 1872. He had suffered through a long and painful illness. To recover her own health Perrier traveled to Morocco. On her return she wrote a travel book. However it also turned out that she was suffering from consumption. Although she was successful in her application to the Royal Literary Fund, Perrier died in Sussex two years later.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]

Bibliography

  • Mea Culpa (1869)
  • A Good Match (1872)
  • A Winter in Morocco (1873)
gollark: Interesting. I wonder why that is.
gollark: How do they break it more than every other language?
gollark: If you want maximum efficiency and have no concern for practical human use, just take English, run it through a good compression algorithm, and encode it as syllables somehow.
gollark: It wouldn't be very good to *speak* that, because of low noise resistance.
gollark: It annoys me that nobody unironically uses machine-parseable languages, so you have to use either horrible regices or giant machine learning models to do natural language processing.

References

  1. "At the Circulating Library Author Information: Amelia Perrier". Victoria Research Web. 2019-07-09. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  2. Perrier, A. (1873). A Winter in Morocco. H.S. King. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  3. Perrier, A. (1872). A Good Match. J. B. Ford. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  4. Fryckstedt, M.C. (1986). Geraldine Jewsbury's Athenaeum Reviews: A Mirror of Mid-Victorian Attitudes to Fiction. Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. S. Academiae Ubsaliensis. ISBN 978-91-554-1914-1. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  5. Alami, A.I. (2013). Mutual Othering: Islam, Modernity, and the Politics of Cross-Cultural Encounters in Pre-Colonial Moroccan and European Travel Writing. State University of New York Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4384-4733-9. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  6. Minca, C.; Wagner, L. (2016). Moroccan Dreams: Oriental Myth, Colonial Legacy. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 255. ISBN 978-1-78673-017-6. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  7. Starkey, P.; Starkey, J. (2001). Interpreting the Orient: Travellers in Egypt and the Near East. Durham Middle East Monographs S. Ithaca Press. ISBN 978-0-86372-258-5. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  8. "Amelia Perrier". The Online Books Page. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  9. "LITERARY NOTICES". Empire (Sydney, NSW : 1850 - 1875). 18 August 1873. Retrieved 2019-10-25.



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