√ | Century of Experience | Evidence | Name of Reader / Listener / Reading Group | Author of Text | Title of Text | Form of Text | |
| 1900-1945 | '[Emrys Hughes] read the social history of Macaulay, Froude, and J.R. Green; Thorold Rogers's Six Centuries of Work an... | Emrys Daniel Hughes | John Richard Green | | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | 'The historical classics "came as a revelation"- Macaulay, J.R. Green, Gibbon, Motley's Dutch Republic, Prescott on Pe... | Jack Lawson | John Richard Green | | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | '[Jack Ashley] was less prepared for Ruskin [College] than most of the students, having read only two books since leav... | Jack Ashley | Thomas Hill Green | | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | '[In The Saturday Review, 19 November 1904], "A Mother" records the books consumed since July by her sixteen-year-old ... | | Evelyn Everett-Green | The Head of the House | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'Barber John Paton remembered that the "Boys' Friend" "ran a serial which was an enormously exciting tale of Alba's op... | John Paton | John Richard Green | [history] | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | [List of books read in 1945]:
'For Whom the Bell Tolls; Henry Brocken; Doctor Faustus; Life of the Bee; The Screwtape... | Hilary Spalding | R. Greene | Friar Bacon & Friar Bungay | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | [List of books read in 1945]:
'For Whom the Bell Tolls; Henry Brocken; Doctor Faustus; Life of the Bee; The Screwtape... | Hilary Spalding | R. Greene | James IV of Scotland | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'Durrell's studies at the British Museum turned even further towards the Elizabethans. He took in Sidney, Marlowe, Nas... | Lawrence Durrell | Robert Greene | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1600-1699 | 'walked to see Sir W. Penn at Deptford, reading by the way a most ridiculous play, a new one call[ed] "The Politician ... | Samuel Pepys | Alexander Green | The Politician cheated | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | Sunday 11 January 1936: 'A very fine day [...] I read Borrow's Wild Wales, into which I can plunge head foremost [...]... | Virginia Woolf | Harry J. Greenwall | The Strange Life of Willy Clarkson | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'I am reading, 'Your Life in 15 Century' Mrs J. R. Green.' | Virginia Woolf | Alice Stopford Green | Town Life in the Fifteenth Century | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'In the fog the safest guide is a blind man. This is a [italics] sortes [end italics] from Julien Green to whose journ... | Antonia White | Julien Green | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'This "new direction" [in literature], Larkin was beginning to realize, would depend on subtlety as well as candour - ... | Philip Larkin | Henry Green | [unknown] | Print: Unknown |
| 1900-1945 | 'I have just read Love on the Dole and His Worship The Mayor, books which were sent me by a friend a short time ago, f... | Edith Sitwell | Walter Greenwood | Love on the Dole | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'I have just read Love on the Dole and His Worship The Mayor, books which were sent me by a friend a short time ago, f... | Edith Sitwell | Walter Greenwood | His Worship the Mayor | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | '[letter from Mrs Ward to Gladstone, regarding his projected article about "Robert Elsmere"] If you do speak of him [T... | Mary Augusta Ward | T.H. Green | Witness of God and Faith, The: Two Lay Sermons | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'after I had supped, I reed of grenhame, and se went to bed' | Margaret Hoby | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'and reed of Granhame tell supper time' | Margaret Hoby | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'and then I hard Margaret Rhodes reed of Mr Grenhm' | Margaret Rhodes | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'after, I hard Mr Rhodes Read of Grenhame, and then I praied and so went to bed' | Richard Rhodes | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'after, I wrought, and hard Mr Rhodes read of Mr Grenhame, and so praied priuatly and then went to bed' | Richard Rhodes | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'and hard Auerill reed of Grenham, and then praied' | Euerill Aske | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1500-1599 | 'and from thence came home and reed of Grenhame, and hard Megg Rhodes read' | Margaret Hoby | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1600-1699 | 'then I wrought and hard Mr Rhodes read of Grenhame' | Richard Rhodes | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1600-1699 | 'after I Came home I hard Mr Ardington Read of Grenhame vnto me' | Mr Ardington | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1600-1699 | 'this day it pleased god to blesse my reading and medetation, and, in the afternone my hearinge of Mr Vrpith: after, I... | Mr Stillington | Richard Greenham | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'As Charles Schreiber's condition appeared to grow worse instead of better [following voyage to South Africa recommend... | Lady Charlotte Schreiber | Green | History of England | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'I said rather dazedly aloud - to Beston - I wonder what time the next train to London goes - & a stranger with a time... | Violet Asquith | Robert Greene | Pandosto | Print: Book |