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Women Writers of England (Mostly) Quiz

Question: For which international organization was J.K. Rowling working when she started writing the Harry Potter stories?
Answer: After graduating from the University of Exeter in 1986, J.K. Rowling began working for Amnesty International in London, where she started to write her Harry Potter novels.
Question: Which of Agatha Christie’s plays set a world record for the longest continuous run at one theatre?
Answer: Agatha Christie’s play The Mousetrap (1952) set a world record for the longest continuous run at one theatre. It ran for 8,862 performances—more than 21 years—at the Ambassadors Theatre, London, before moving to a different venue.
Question: Who was the chief model for the character Orlando in Virginia Woolf’s novel of that name?
Answer: Vita Sackville-West was an English novelist and poet who was the chief model for the character Orlando in Virginia Woolf’s novel Orlando (1928).
Question: What is the pseudonym of the author of the novel Middlemarch?
Answer: The author of the novel Middlemarch (1871–72) is George Eliot, which is the pseudonym of Mary Ann, or Marian, Cross, née Evans.
Question: Who sometimes used the pseudonym Mrs. Ogniblat L'Artsau?
Answer: Australian novelist Miles Franklin used the pseudonym Mrs. Ogniblat L’Artsau (as well as Brent of Bin Bin). Franklin's feminism and her outright rejection of traditional women’s roles made her books controversial in Australia.
Question: Who was the first Englishwoman known to earn her living by writing?
Answer: The English dramatist, novelist, and poet Aphra Behn was the first Englishwoman known to earn her living by writing. Behn’s versatility, like her output, was immense; she wrote many popular novels, and she often adapted works by other dramatists.
Question: Which of the following wrote an entire book based on the imagined memories of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s dog, Flush?
Answer: The English novelist Virginia Woolf wrote two biographies: one is fanciful, a fragment of the life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning and her husband, Robert Browning, through the imagined memories of Barrett Browning's dog (Flush; 1933); the other is a full-length biography of the art critic Roger Fry (1940).
Question: What pseudonym did Emily Brontë use?
Answer: Emily Brontë used the pseudonym Ellis Bell for her one novel, Wuthering Heights (1847).
Question: Which of these authors wrote only one novel?
Answer: The English writer Emily Brontë produced only one novel: Wuthering Heights (1847).
Question: Which novelist is considered a pioneer in stream-of-consciousness novels?
Answer: English novelist Dorothy Richardson was a pioneer in stream-of-consciousness fiction. She published the sequence novel Pilgrimage, in multiple separate volumes from 1915 to 1938. It is an extraordinarily sensitive story, seen cinematically through the eyes of Miriam Henderson, an attractive and mystical New Woman.