Volume 1: Celibates (1895) General Introduction; Volume Introduction, George Moore, Celibates (1895); Textual Variants; Annotated page proofs of Celibates Contemporary reception [G B Shaw], 'Mr George Moore's New Novel', Pall Mall Gazette (1887); George Moore, 'Letter to the Editor'. Pall Mall Gazette (1887); Letter from George Moore to George Bernard Shaw; 'Novels of the Week', Athenaeum (1887) (excerpt); 'Novels and Stories', Saturday Review (1887) (excerpt); Harry Thurston Peck, 'The Rise of Mr. George ...
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Volume 1: Celibates (1895) General Introduction; Volume Introduction, George Moore, Celibates (1895); Textual Variants; Annotated page proofs of Celibates Contemporary reception [G B Shaw], 'Mr George Moore's New Novel', Pall Mall Gazette (1887); George Moore, 'Letter to the Editor'. Pall Mall Gazette (1887); Letter from George Moore to George Bernard Shaw; 'Novels of the Week', Athenaeum (1887) (excerpt); 'Novels and Stories', Saturday Review (1887) (excerpt); Harry Thurston Peck, 'The Rise of Mr. George Moore', Bookman (1895); Barbara [Arnold Bennett], 'Book Chat', Woman (1895); 'Recent Fiction: 'Celibates", Critic (1895); 'Celibates', Bookman (1895); 'Short Stories: Celibates', Athenaeum (1895); W[illiam] D[ean] Howells, [From] 'Life and Letters', Harper's Weekly (1895); Frank Danby [Julia Frankau], 'Mr. George Moore's New Novel', Saturday Review (1895); George Moore, 'Correspondence: Mr. George Moore's New Novel. To the Editor of the Saturday Review', Saturday Review (1895); Frank Danby [Julia Frankau], 'Correspondence: 'Celibates' and Mr. George Moore. To the editor of the Saturday Review', Saturday Review (1895); [A. Mary F. Robinson?] 'Celibates', The Literary World (1895); William Morton Payne, 'Recent Fiction', Dial (1895) (excerpt); Yellow Dwarf [Henry Harland], 'Books', Yellow Book (1895) (excerpt); 'Book Reviews: Moore's Celibates', Overland Monthly (1896); Harry Thurston Peck, [From] 'Mr. George Moore's New Novel', Bookman (1898); Max Meyerfeld, 'Charakteristiken', Das literarische Echo (1901) (excerpt); James Huneker, 'Three Disagreeable Girls', Forum (1914) (excerpt); Temple Scott, Introduction to George Moore, Celibates (1915); Susan L Mitchell, George Moore (1916) (excerpt); Stuart P Sherman, 'The Aesthetic Naturalism of George Moore', On Contemporary Literature (1917) (excerpt); John Freeman, A Portrait of George Moore in a Study of his Work (1922) (excerpt); 'Mildred Lawson', Lady's Pictorial (1888) (excerpts); George Moore, A Mere Accident (1887) (excerpt); George Moore, 'Balzac', Impressions and Opinions (1891) (excerpt) Celibates is a collection of three novella-length stories about sexual repression and 1890s hysteria. All three short stories haunted Moore's subsequent writing, as testified by his desire to undertake continual revisions even in his collections of the 1920s (see volume 5). Volume 2: Other Stories, 1882-1931 Volume Introduction; Other Short Stories, 1882-1931; 'Under the Fan', Tinsley's Magazine (1882); 'A Russian Husband', in Augustus M. Moore (ed.), Walnuts and Wine: A Christmas Annual (1883); 'Dried Fruit', Court and Society Review (1885); 'Two Men, A Railway Story', Court and Society Review (1887); 'A Strange Death', Hawk (1889); 'In Blue Silk and Brass', Hawk (1890); 'Mr. Philip Gower and Two Ladies', Hawk (1890); 'A Faithful Heart', Speaker (1892); 'Parted', Daily Chronicle (1893); 'An Episode in Bachelor Life', Sketch (1894); 'An Episode in Married Life', Sketch (1894); 'In Sight of Death', Illustrated London News (1892); 'A Flood', Irish Review (1911); 'At the Turn of the Road: An Irish Girl's Love Story', Hearst International - Cosmopolitan (1927); 'The Strange Story of the Three Golden Fishes: A Comedy of a Man Who Always Was Lucky ? Especially in Marriage', Nash's Magazine (1927); The Talking Pine (1931); Textual Variants Contemporary reception Jacob Tonson [Arnold Bennett], 'Books and Persons in London and Paris', New Age (1911) (excerpt); Lawrence C Groom, 'Mr. George Moore: An Interview', New York Herald Tribune (1927); John Austin, 'Hail, My Farewell! By George Moore (in an interview)', T P's Weekly (1927); George Moore, 'Turgueneff', Fortnightly Review (1888) (excerpt) Volume 3: The Untilled Field (1931) Volume Introduction; The Untilled Field (1931): 'The Exile'; 'Home Sickness'; 'Some Parishioners'; 'Patchwork'; 'The Wedding Feast'; 'The Window'; 'A Letter to Rome'; 'A Play-House in the Waste'; 'Julia
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