Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dorothy_Cowlin> ?p ?o }
- Dorothy_Cowlin abstract "Dorothy Cowlin (16 August 1911 – 10 January 2010) was a British novelist, poet, newspaper columnist and article writer with strong associations to North Yorkshire.During her life she wrote 8 novels which were all published by Jonathan Cape, 4 biographical novels aimed at younger readers, and 4 collections of poetry.She wrote columns for Malton newspaper the Gazette & Herald for more than 30 years, a long running series of articles for Scarborough's weekly paper The Mercury, and articles for magazines like The Dalesman, Yorkshire Life and Yorkshire Ridings, which often concerned local history and her own reminiscences. A collection of 25 articles that originally appeared in the Gazette & Herald was published in 2000 under the title Do You Remember? Pickering 50 years ago. Her poems appeared in The Dalesman and many other magazines.Her poem The Sound of Rain has been featured by BBC Radio 4's programme Poetry Please, and her poem Pennine Tunnel was the winner of a competition run by Yorkshire Television's magazine programme Calendar and judged by David Morley All her work was published under her maiden name rather than her married name, Dorothy Whalley.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin almaMater Victoria_University_of_Manchester.
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthDate "1911-08-16".
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthName "Dorothy Cowlin".
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthPlace Grantham.
- Dorothy_Cowlin deathDate "2010-01-10".
- Dorothy_Cowlin deathPlace Malton,_North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin deathPlace North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink deaf.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink www.dalesman.co.uk.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink www.gazetteherald.co.uk.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 6667364.When_words_mean_so_much_more.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 6666631.Meet_one_of_the_founding_fathers_of_Beck_Isle_Museum.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 6665550.The_nuns_of_Pickering.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 6664795.All_change_in_Pickering_.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 1049934.On_the_grand_tour_with_the_over_50s_.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink 794164.print.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink Publisher:Frederick_Muller_Ltd.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink www.merlinpress.co.uk.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink gabrielegriffin.htm.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink www.yorkshirelife.co.uk.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageExternalLink www.yorkshireridingsmagazine.com.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageID "43524146".
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageLength "24656".
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- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageRevisionID "697870974".
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Bachelor_of_Arts.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Biographical_novel.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Category:1911_births.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Category:2010_deaths.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_British_novelists.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink David_Morley_(poet).
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Grantham.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Hampton_Bishop.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink ITV_News_Calendar.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink ITV_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink John_OLondons_Weekly.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Jonathan_Cape.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Malton,_North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Marghanita_Laski.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Pickering,_North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Podiatry.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Poetry_Please.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink RAF_Locking.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Air_Force.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Scarborough,_North_Yorkshire.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Stevie_Smith.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Herald_(Glasgow).
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Listener_(magazine).
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Scarborough_News.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Scotsman.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Spectator.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Times_Literary_Supplement.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink The_Yorkshire_Post.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Thornton-le-Dale.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Manchester.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Victoria_University_of_Manchester.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Virginia_Woolf.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLink Yorkshire_Dales.
- Dorothy_Cowlin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dorothy Cowlin".
- Dorothy_Cowlin almaMater Victoria_University_of_Manchester.
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthDate "1911-08-16".
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthName "Dorothy Cowlin".
- Dorothy_Cowlin birthPlace "Grantham, Lincolnshire, England".
- Dorothy_Cowlin children "Virginia".
- Dorothy_Cowlin date "January 2016".
- Dorothy_Cowlin deathDate "2010-01-10".
- Dorothy_Cowlin deathPlace "Malton, North Yorkshire, England".
- Dorothy_Cowlin education "BA".
- Dorothy_Cowlin language "English".
- Dorothy_Cowlin name "Dorothy Cowlin".
- Dorothy_Cowlin nationality "British".
- Dorothy_Cowlin occupation "Novelist, poet, columnist".
- Dorothy_Cowlin reason "Needs Summary of long quotations".
- Dorothy_Cowlin restingPlace "The East Riding Crematorium".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign John_OLondons_Weekly.
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign Marghanita_Laski.
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign The_Listener_(magazine).
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign The_Scotsman.
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign The_Spectator.
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign The_Yorkshire_Post.
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "--06-14".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "--11-07".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "Blurb".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "Gabriele Griffin".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "Stevie Smith, September 1941".
- Dorothy_Cowlin sign "Truth".
- Dorothy_Cowlin source The_Spectator.
- Dorothy_Cowlin source "from the introduction of the 1991 republication".
- Dorothy_Cowlin spouse "Ronald Harry Whalley".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "A good well-written honest book. Miss Cowlin uses prose of great clarity, and her writing is imbued with an unusual quality of charity. Her descriptions, both of people and places, have great lucidity, and she transcribes dialect -- with a more accurate ear than most.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "A very moving book, and a convincingly human one.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "A village on the border of England and Wales is the setting of Dorothy Cowlin's new novel, and Peter Harkness, vicar of the parish, is its chief character. For health reasons, Peter has recently been transferred from a busy town living. The accidental rediscovery of a forgotten old well in the vicarage garden soon disturbs the quiet of his new surroundings: the idea that this well was once credited with supernatural powers is publicized by the local press and, to Peter's dismay, adopted with enthusiasm by most of his parishioners. He regards a reputed miracle with suspicion, and for reasons of temperament and conscience struggles against the general tide of credulity - not with entire success.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "At eighteen a boy leaving a Yorkshire Grammar School travels to London with an architectural scholarship. He does not return for fifteen years. Coming back to the district on a professional visit, he meets the schoolboy son of whose existence he has never been told – and in whose embryo existence he once refused to believe. Too young then to face his responsibilities, he becomes increasingly eager to assume them now, but is faced with the bitter recognition that her has forfeited the right to display the pride and affection he feels. Neither he nor the boy's mother has married; their adolescent love revives hesitantly, hindered by her unacknowledged resentment of his early desertion, and he sees that although it was easy when he was a youth to break all emotional bonds and travel south, in maturity the inner journey home can be made only by slow stages.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "Dorothy Cowlin has had much praise for her unobtrusive skill in analysing the effect in domestic life of unexpected but not incredible emotional situations. In her new novel a middle-aged couple surprise themselves. Happily married, with a common interest in archaeology, their personal and professional lives are so interwoven that nothing, it seemed, could disrupt their marriage. But they reckoned without Nature. The combined effects of a holiday in isolation on the North Yorkshire moors, the bewildering heat of the sun, the dreaming perfection of the summer moon, and perhaps a draught of home-brewed wine, induce aberrations in the pattern of behaviour to an extent alarming to themselves and embarrassing to their companions.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "Dorothy Cowlin's new novel gives a striking account of a Lancashire elementary school teacher's experiences in a poor industrial area during the nineteen-thirties and forties. Barbara Neave, a young woman of working-class origin, has climbed the scholarship ladder to university level, and enters the teaching profession at the time of a 'glut' of qualified teachers. She is obliged to accept a job in a small Elementary Church School. The descriptions of her slow apprenticeship - disheartening, tiring, occasionally comic or rewarding - have the sureness of personal knowledge. Side by side with these runs the story of her personal life, and in this Dorothy Cowlin shows again that vividness and honesty which distinguishes so much of her writing.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "Fluent, intelligent and vivacious.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "Her prose is beautiful, and her vivid descriptions of the hot summer weather among the hills remain in the mind. This is a considerable advance on her last novel, and she is a novelist whom her adopted county may be glad to claim.".
- Dorothy_Cowlin text "Her two characters are brilliantly drawn, and some of the passages between them are narrated in a way difficult to forget. In this as in other respects The Holly and the Ivy leaves the impression that uncommon reserves of thought and feeling have gone to its writing.".