Jean Marishall (Jane Marshall) (
fl. 1765–1788) was a Scottish novelist and dramatist. She was employed by the publisher
John Newbery as a writer for the young. As a novelist she was influenced by
Samuel Richardson.[1][2]
The History of Miss Clarinda Cathcart and Miss Fanny Kenton, October 1765. a sentimental
epistolary novel. A second edition appeared in 1760, and a third in 1767.
The History of Alicia Montagu, by the Author of Clarinda Cathcart, 1767, 2 vols.
Sir Harry Gaylove, or Comedy in Embryo, 1772, printed in Edinburgh, with a prologue by
Thomas Blacklock, an epilogue by
Hugh Downman, and a preface by herself.
A Series of Letters for the Improvement of Youth, 1788.