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  1. 10. Jan. 2014 · Agnes Boulton's memoir of her first two years of marriage to Eugene O'Neill was published in 1958, two years after the premiere of O'Neill's masterpiece, Long Day's Journey into Night. Contemporary critics dismissed the book as impressionistic, and it received little popular attention. Now held as a classic depicting one woman's strivings for self-representation, this new edition restores two ...

  2. Abstract: The collection consists of writings, correspondence, and other papers broadly relating to Agnes Boulton. Writings include a typescript for Agnes Boulton's memoir about her marriage to Eugene O'Neill, Part of a Long Story (1958), and a partial typescript of Trouble in the Flesh (1959) by Max Wylie, as well as handwritten and typed notes (perhaps those of Boulton) for story and play ideas.

  3. Agnes Ruby Boulton (September 19, 1893 – November 25, 1968) was a British-born American pulp magazine writer in the 1910s, later the wife of Eugene O'Neill.

  4. 23. Jan. 2009 · ‘A Wind Is Rising’: The Correspondence of Agnes Boulton and Eugene O'Neill. Edited by William Davies King. Cranbury, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2000. Pp. 328 + illus. $49.50 Hb.

  5. 28. Apr. 2022 · Agnes Boulton was a successful "pulp fiction" writer in the 1910s, later the wife of Eugene O'Neill. Prior to their marriage, she wrote for such magazines as Breezy Stories, Snappy Stories, and Young's Magazine. Boulton was born in 1892 in England, the daughter of Cecil and Edward W. Boulton (a painter), but grew up in Philadelphia and later in West Point Pleasant, New Jersey.

  6. De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre. Agnes Ruby Boulton (19 de septiembre de 1893 - 25 de noviembre de 1968) fue una escritora estadounidense de relatos para revistas pulp, activa durante la década de 1910. Agnes Boulton. Información personal.

  7. 12. Sept. 2007 · His second wife Agnes Boulton, who was no slouch as a writer herself, attempted in this book to shed light on the matter. Here she took center stage to bring forth the truth, either as she understood it, or at least as she wanted it to be understood. Although she is often disregarded as a footnote in O'Neill's life, here she sought to make her ...

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