Virginia Wales Johnson (28 December 1849, in Brooklyn, New York – 16 January 1916) was a United States novelist.
Her parents were from Boston, and she was home schooled. After 1875 she lived in Florence, Italy.
Works
Her early publications were mainly for young people. She later wrote fiction for adults. 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) — "her finest work" — 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
- ^ 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). "Johnson, Virginia Wales" . Encyclopedia Americana.
External links
- "Harper's Magazine: Virginia W. Johnson". harpers.org. Retrieved 25 July 2011.