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  1. Ivy Teresa Low Litvinov (Russian: Айви Вальтеровна Литвинова) (4 June 1889 – 16 April 1977) was an English-Russian writer and translator, and wife of Soviet diplomat and foreign minister Maxim Litvinov.

  2. 23 de abr. de 2024 · This article examines the early literary career of the writer Ivy Low. Low’s work and literary friendships of this period offer a rich source of insight into the contradictions and challenges of British literary culture in the early 1910s, especially for a young woman of Jewish descent eager to belong to a new generation of writers.

  3. 14 de jan. de 2014 · Dying in one’s bed wasn’t the usual exit from Joseph Stalin‘s Russia, and Ivy Low Litvinov, as the wife of the genocidaires foreign minister Maxim Litvinov, wasn’t a likely candidate for a natural end. Yet she lived in Moscow with their children until 1972, when she returned to the U.K.

  4. 29 de mar. de 2021 · Ivy Low was a modern young woman who had recently published her first two novels and nurtured grand ambitions for her literary career. Maxim Litvinov was a middle-aged Russian Bolshevik living in exile from the tsarist empire.

  5. Overview. Ivy Low. (1889—1977) Quick Reference. (1889–1977) married (1916) Maxim Maximovich Litvinov (1876–1951). Brought up in London, the daughter of Alice Herbert and of a philologist who translated the novels of Björnstjerne Björnson (1832–1910), she was ... From: Low, Ivy in The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction » Subjects: Literature.

  6. Ivy Low Litvinov (1889-1977) has long deserved to be the subject of a book, as much for her life as for her writing. The first-born daughter of the scholar and educator Walter Low and the novelist Alice Herbert, she was the author of two novels—one mildly scandalous—and a friend of D.H. Lawrence when in 1916 she chose to marry an obscure ...

  7. 19 de mai. de 2017 · Conflicting accounts about the autobiographical writings of Soviet Foreign Minister Maksim Litvinov have circulated for decades. Some of the confusion can be clarified by an examination of the correspondence of his British wife Ivy Low Litvinov.