Robina F. Hardy Explained

Robina Forrester Hardy (died 1891), known professionally as Robina F. Hardy, was a Scottish Victorian author, poet and Christian missionary.[1] [2]

Robina F. Hardy
Birth Name:Robina Forrester Hardy
Birth Date:18—?
Birth Place:Edinburgh, Scotland
Death Date:1891
Occupation:Writer, poet, editor, teacher, missionary
Notable Works:Jock Halliday: a Grassmarket Hero Glenairlie; or, the Last of the Graemes

Life and career

Hardy was the daughter of a doctor and grand-daughter of a minister at St. Giles' Cathedral.

Career and Works

Hardy's fiction draws on the experiences she gained whilst working as a missionary in the Grassmarket slums, described as 'brutally realistic'. Her work has also been linked to the Scottish kailyard school and the popular fiction of Annie S. Swan. Furthermore, she became a contributor and sub-editor for the Morning Rays, a Church of Scotland magazine for children, with much of her children's literature subsequently being published separately.[3] Other work includes her time as a cookery teacher at Dr. William Robertson's Vennel School for girls.

Works

References

  1. Book: Reilly, Catherine. Mid-Victorian Poetry, 1860-1879. 2000. A&C Black. 9780720123180. en.
  2. Book: Nash, Andrew. Kailyard and Scottish Literature. 2007. Rodopi. 978-9042022034. en.
  3. Book: Whittington-Egan, Richard. William Roughead's Chronicles of Murder. 1991. Lochar Pub.. 9780948403552. en.
  4. Book: HARDY, Robina F.. Hester Glen's Holidays; and how She Spent Them, Etc. 1881. Glasgow. en.
  5. Book: Hardy, Robina F.. The Good Ship Rover. Dodo Press. 2008. 9781409951070. en.
  6. Book: Hardy, Robina F.. Tom Telfer's Shadow: A Story of Everyday Life. 1884. Oliphant, Anderson, & Ferrier. en.
  7. Book: Blackwell, Mark. The Secret Life of Things: Animals, Objects, and It-narratives in Eighteenth-century England. 2007. Bucknell University Press. 9780838756669. en.