Showing Records: 1 - 10 of 253
Heyer to Unknown Recipient, 1935-11-09
"Nice one, this [...] If I do one a month could you sell them?"
Heyer to Unknown Recipient, 1938-07-09
"No, carry on. No sense in screwing them up on this book. Very busy on my last 30,000 words. This is a very long book!"
Heyer to Unknown Recipient, 1938-04-01
"Entry should read: These Old Shades; Publications: The Black Moth; Devil's Club; The Conquerer..."
Heyer to Unknown Recipient, Sept. 4
"Hello, are you back again? Did you enjoy the Wye[?] Valley? [...] Well, what a price my serial story? I may as well tell you (since I feel no one else will) that it's developing into a remarkably lieu effort..."
Heyer to Unknown Recipient, Undated
"I like this very much- tell H. and S. so, will you? In great [?], so excuse paper and pencil scrawl."
Incomplete Letter from Heyer to Unknown Recipient, Undated
"[...] enchanting story, and would make a charming film, given a director as clever as the author- and only given that!..."
Incompletely dated letter from Georgette Heyer (Rougier) to L.P. Moore, Nov. 29 (likely 1924 or 1925)
"I am terribly sorry to hear from Miss Perriam that you have had to have an operation, and such a serious one, too. I felt that I must write to you and tell you how very, very sorry I am..."
Incompletely dated letter from Georgette Heyer (Rougier) to L.P. Moore, Jan. 17 (likely 1925 or 1926)
"I know you'll be interested to hear my latest news, so I am writing to tell you that I'm going to be a grass widow next Friday. Ronald has got a job with the Gerogian Manganese Company, and sails for Russia on the 22nd..."
Incompletely dated letter from Georgette Heyer (Rougier) to L.P. Moore, May 4 (likely mid-1920s)
"If you want to meet Mr. A.D. Wykes at anytime I think it would be wisdon on your part if you refrained from mentioning my name. You never know; and I should hate to think I was the cause of your death..."
Incompletely dated letter from Georgette Heyer (Rougier) to L.P. Moore, Feb. 24
"I think that either you are cleverer know you know at conceiling your worries, or that I am an imperceptive woman, for I had no suspicion that anything was on your mind..."