“A Terrible Beauty is Born”: Erskine Childers’ The Riddle of the Sands, the Spy Thriller and Modern Identity.Published in:English Studies, 2018, v. 99, n. 5, p. 538, doi. 10.1080/0013838X.2018.1475592By:Sandberg, EricPublication type:Article
Crimson Nightmares: Tales of Invasion and Fears of Revolution in Early Twentieth-Century Britain.Published in:2014By:Hughes, Michael;Wood, HarryPublication type:Literary Criticism
Edwardian Spy Literature and the Ethos of Sportsmanship: The Sport of Spying.Published in:2010By:Hitchner, ThomasPublication type:Literary Criticism
ERSKINE CHILDERS, A VERY ENGLISH IRISHMAN.Published in:History Today, 1988, v. 38, n. 10, p. 27By:Foster, RoyPublication type:Article
THE CREATIVITY OF WAR PLANNERS: ARMED FORCES PROFESSIONALS AND THE PRE-1914 BRITISH INVASION-SCARE GENRE.Published in:2011By:Matin, A. MichaelPublication type:Literary Criticism
Erskine Childers and the Sense of Insecurity: Impressionism and Intelligence in The Riddle of the Sands.Published in:2023By:Parkes, AdamPublication type:Literary Criticism