Books and other publications (including poems) mentioned in Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons, including imaginary works. For further discussion of some of these (and for annotations of other stuff in the book) visit the BookDrum entry for Cold Comfort Farm.
Real:
Novels:
Did She Love Him? by James Grant
Home Influence by Grace Aguilar
How She Loved Him by Florence Marryat (this should
actually be How They Loved Him)
Macaria, or Altars of Sacrifice by A. J.
Evans-Wilson
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
Persuasion by Jane Austen
Shirley by Charlotte Brontë
Villette by Charlotte Brontë
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Poetry:
'Julian and Maddalo' by Percy Bysshe Shelley
'Adonaïs' (An Elegy on the Death of John Keats, Author of
Endymion, Hyperion, etc.) by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Publications:
Imaginary:
Novels:
The Fulfilment of Martin Hoare by Anthony Pookworthy,
A.B.S, L.L.R.
Non-fiction:
The Higher Common Sense and Pensées by the
Abbe Fausse-Maigre (these are works of philosophy)
Madame Olga's Dream Book (presumably a book of dream
interpretations)
Odour of Sanctity (a history of sanitation)
Victorian Vista (a life of Carlyle) - interestingly,
there was later published a book titled Victorian Vista, but about a different
subject altogether. I can't but wonder if the author got the idea from Gibbons.
Play:
Manallalive-O! by Brandt Slurb
On Your Toes!
Publications:
"Haussman-Haffnitz on Brassières" (magazine?
thesis? I have no idea)
Milk Producer's Weekly Bulletin and Cowkeeper's Guide
Photo Bits (there was a real magazine with that title,
but as it ceased publication in 1914 and Cold Comfort Farm was published
in the 1930s, I doubt it's the same magazine, although probably it is of
similar nature)
Internationally Progressive Farmers Guide and Helpmeet
Planned but not yet published (both by Mr. My(er)b(ur)g:
Scapegoat: A Study of Branwell Brontë (alternative
title: Pard-Spirit: A Study of Branwell Brontë)
Virginal
Doubtful:
News of People (presumably a magazine or newspaper).
I could not determine whether this was real or not, but the editor of the
BookDrum entry for Cold Comfort Farm suggests the title is a parody of
the title of the tabloid News of the World.
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