<p>"Elizabeth von Arnim is remembered now as the author of Elizabeth and Her German Garden, and for being Katherine Mansfield's cousin. But there is much more to this witty, talented, intelligent writer who produced more than 20 books in a career which spanned some 40 years. Isobel Maddison's detailed and engaging study draws upon a wealth of original sources and leads us back to the richness of von Arnim's writing. Elizabeth von Arnim was well respected by other writers, including Bertrand Russell, H.G. Wells, Ethel Smyth, Bernard Shaw, E.M. Forster and Vernon Lee. It is a pleasure to see von Arnim finally given the attention she deserves." - <strong>Trudi Tate</strong>, Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, UK </p><p>"This study of Elizabeth von Arnim's writing is rich in its treatment of her intermodern cultural contexts. Maddison liberates von Arnim from value judgments about popular vs modernist writing by examining the distinct ways she took up concerns shared with notable modernists, including her younger cousin, Katherine Mansfield, and Virginia Woolf. This study will convince many to rediscover and enjoy her novels." - <strong>Bonnie Kime Scott</strong>, San Diego State University, USA </p><p>"The book provides a useful biographical preface and a particularly helpful appendix, compiled by Gayle M. Richardson, lists the contents of von Arnimâs archive at The Huntington Library. Maddison concludes with the hope that her study will inspire more work on von Arnim." - <strong>Edwardian Culture</strong></p><p>"For the von Arnim scholar this book will be essential reading, as nearly one third of it consists of the Finding Aid to von Arnimâs papers (the Countess Russell Papers) at the Huntington Library, California plus a vast bibliography and an excellent index. That resource alone is a seriously useful slice of literary correspondence from the early twentieth century, including von Arnimâs diaries, manuscripts and letters." </p>