Further Reading
- Additional coverage of Brophy's life and career is contained in the following sources published by Gale: Contemporary Authors, Vol. 149; Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series, Vol. 4; Contemporary Authors First Revision Series, Vols. 5-8; Contemporary Authors New Revision Series, Vol. 25; Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 14; and Major Twentieth Century Writers.
- Brophy, Brigid. "The Great Celtic/Hibernian School." Performance & Reality: Essays from Grand Street, edited by Ben Sonnenberg, pp. 118-25. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1989. (Details the consequences of Oscar Wilde's morality trail and its consequences in relation to his thematic concerns in some of his works.)
- Miller, Karl. "Brigid Brophy: A Memoir." Raritan 15 (Spring 1996): 38-52. (Reminisces about Brophy's writings contributed to the New Statesman, where Miller was editor, and the various critical reactions they prompted.)
- Review of Palace without Chairs, by Brigid Brophy. Washington Post Book World IX, No. 9 (7 October 1979): 15. (Briefly comments that the novel "is told in a verbally dexterous style, with dialogue that is alternately silly and sharp.")
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