- ^ "Lydia Maria Child, Letters of Lydia Maria Child, Introduction". perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
- ^ a b Bruce Mills, "Introduction", in Letters from New-York, ed. Athens, University of Georgia Press, 1998, p. xi. ISBN 978-0-8203-2077-9.
- ^ "[Recent American Novels]". The North American Review: 78–104. July 1, 1825.
- ^ Karcher, 1988 p. x–xi: Women’s rights leaders and abolitionists Sarah Moore Grimké and Elizabeth Cady Stanton "would acknowledge Child as a forerunner".
- ^ a b c Karcher, 1988, p. xx.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. x–xii: "Child's historical novels, Hobomok and The Rebels (1825), were among the earliest to domesticate the fashionable genre created by Sir Walter Scott, and to harness for the purposes of American nationalism."
- ^ Karcher, 1988, p. xv.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. xvii–xviii.
- ^ a b Karcher, 1988, p. xviii.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. xvii–xviii.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, p. xviii: How much Child’s first novel owes to Yamowyden "is an open question".
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. xviii–xix.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. xiii–xiv.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, pp. xi, 153: In 1828 both Child and her spouse David "were actively campaigning against Andrew Jackson's Cherokee removal scheme…".
- ^ Karcher, 1988, p. xxxiii.
- ^ Karcher, 1988, p. xi.
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