[2] A commemorative plaque marking the house where she spent her childhood was mounted at 14 Eglinton Crescent, Edinburgh in 2016.
[3] She began writing at a young age but hid her efforts because her parents and governesses disapproved.
[5] Her 1932 novel Mrs. Tim of the Regiment, which describes her life as a British army wife,[6] was based on her personal diary.
In 2017, Historic Environment Scotland awarded a plaque to commemorate Stevenson, at 14 Eglinton Crescent, Edinburgh.
Amberwell Bel Lamington Katherine Wentworth Sarah Morris Remembers Gerald and Elizabeth Five additional works were published by Greyladies after being discovered in a box in the Stevenson family attic.
Miss Buncle spills into The Four Graces as well as Spring Magic, and her book is described in Anna and her Daughters.
Anna pops up briefly in the Katherine books which link with Charlotte Fairlie (Mr. Heath the vicar makes a re-appearance this time).
Stevenson's last book, The House of the Deer (a reworking of a serial published in The Glasgow Bulletin in 1936) revisits the MacAslan family in the second generation, and is a sequel to Gerald and Elizabeth.
Bel's friend Margaret was a Musgrave, and there are links from The Musgraves to The Tall Stranger, which was a sequel (of sorts) to Five Windows (though Stevenson, uncharacteristically, makes an error between the two books - in Five Windows the main character is David Kirke while in The Tall Stranger his name is spelled Kirk).