tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6791096.post5253266665438200187..comments2024-03-02T22:28:45.521-05:00Comments on Inveresk Street Ingrate: Tramps, Workmates and Revolutionaries edited by H. Gustav Klaus (Journeyman Press 1993)Imposs1904http://www.blogger.com/profile/04043116442576404667noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6791096.post-23078822027059302722014-08-29T09:10:57.625-04:002014-08-29T09:10:57.625-04:00Page 154
The biographical blurb for Barbor from t...Page 154<br /><br />The biographical blurb for Barbor from the book is as follows:<br />H.R. Barbor (1893-1933)<br /><br />Herbert Reginald Barbor was born in Lowestoft, Suffolk. His life-long interest was the theatre. At one time he was the drama critic of A. R.. Orage's The New Age. From 1919 to 1923 he edited The Actor, the official organ of the Actors' Association, of which he was a fierce proponent. His publications include a novel. Against the Red Sky (1922), a play, Jezebel (1924), and a pamphlet, The Theatre: an Art and an Industry (1924).<br /><br />Criticism: H. Gustav Klaus ed., The Socialist Novel in Britain (Brighton, 1982), pp. 97-100Imposs1904https://www.blogger.com/profile/04043116442576404667noreply@blogger.com