Virginia Wales Johnson (28 December 1849, in Brooklyn, New York โ 16 January 1916[1]) was a United States novelist.
Her parents were from Boston, and she was home schooled.[1] After 1875 she lived in Florence, Italy.
Works
Her early publications were mainly for young people. She later wrote fiction for adults.[1] Her works include:
- Kettle Club Series (1870)
 - Travels of an American Owl (1870)
 - Joseph the Jew (1873)
 - A Sack of Gold (1874)
 - The Catskill Fairies (1875)
 - The Calderwood Secret (1875)
 - A Foreign Marriage (1880)
 - The Neptune Vase (1881) โ "her finest work" โ 1920 Encyclopedia Americana
 - The Famalls of Tipton (1885)
 - Tulip's Place (1886)
 - Miss Nancy's Pilgrimage (1887)
 - The House of the Musician (1887)
 - Lake Como: a World's Shrine, on Como, Italy (1902) at archive.org
 - A Lift on the Road (1913)
 
Descriptive works
- The Lily of the Arno, or, Florence, Past and Present (1891)
 - Genoa the Superb, the City of Columbus (1892)
 - Many Years of a Florence Balcony (1911)
 
Notes
- 1 2 3 Sarah G. Bowerman (1933). "Johnson, Virginia Wales". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
 
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). . Encyclopedia Americana.
 
External links
- "Harper's Magazine: Virginia W. Johnson". harpers.org. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
 
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