Author:Irene Temple Bailey
(Redirected from Author:Temple Bailey)
←Author Index: Ba | Irene Temple Bailey (1880s–1953) |
American novelist and short story writer who wrote using the pen name Temple Bailey; contributor of stories to national magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, Cavalier Magazine, Cosmopolitan, The American Magazine, McClure's, Woman's Home Companion, Good Housekeeping, McCall's and others |
WorksEdit
(partial list)
- Judy (1907) Project Gutenberg
- Glory of Youth (1913) Project Gutenberg
- Contrary Mary (1914) Project Gutenberg; (external scan)
- A Girl's Courage (1916)
- Adventures in Girlhood (1917) hathitrust
- Mistress Anne (1917) Project Gutenberg
- The Tin Soldier (1918) Project Gutenberg; (external scan)
- Trumpeter Swan (1920) Project Gutenberg
- The Gay Cockade (1921) (Frontispiece by C. E. Chambers) short stories (transcription project)
- The Dim Lantern (1922) hathitrust (1923 publ.)
Magazine storiesEdit
- "Burned Toast," in The Saturday Evening Post Dec 4, 1920 (also in The Gay Cockade 1922)
- "The Emperor's Ghost" (ss) Scribner's Magazine, Feb 1919 (also in The Gay Cockade 1922)
- "The Eternal Feminine," in McClure's Magazine Oct 1908
- "The Hidden Land" (ss) in Harper's Monthly Magazine Oct and Nov 1920 (also in The Gay Cockade (1922)
- "In the Bachelor's Garden" in The Smart Set, vol 1, 1902
- "The Inconstant Moon," in Munsey's Magazine Oct 1908
- "Made in Germany" (ss) Scribner's Magazine, Jun 1915
- "Phyllida," in Scribner's Magazine Dec 1908
- "A Rebellious Grandmother," in Harper's Monthly Magazine Sep 1914 (also in The Gay Cockade (922)
- "The Rejecting of Cartwright" in The Smart Set, vol 1, 1902
Some or all works by this author are in the public domain in the United States because they were published before January 1, 1926.
The author died in 1953, so works by this author are also in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 60 years or less. Works by this author may also be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.