Author:Emilie Rose Macaulay

Fiction

 * Abbots Verney (1906)
 * The Furnace (1907)
 * The Secret River (1909)
 * The Valley Captives (1911)
 * Views and Vagabonds (1912) John Murray
 * The Lee Shore (1913) Hodder & Stoughton
 * The Two Blind Countries (1914) Poetry. Sidgwick & Jackson
 * The Making of a Bigot (c 1914) Hodder & Stoughton
 * Non-Combatants and Others (1916) Hodder & Stoughton
 * What Not: A Prophetic Comedy (1918)
 * Three Days (1919) Poetry. Constable
 * Potterism (1920) US Edition Boni and Liveright
 * Dangerous Ages (1921) US Edition Boni and Liveright
 * Mystery At Geneva: An Improbable Tale of Singular Happenings (1922) William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd; US Edition Boni and Liveright
 * Told by an Idiot (1923)
 * Orphan Island (1924) William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd; US Edition Boni and Liveright
 * Crewe Train (1926)
 * Keeping Up Appearances (1928) William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd
 * Misfortunes, poems by Rose Macaulay with engravings by Stanley Morison 1930
 * Staying with Relations (1930)
 * They Were Defeated (1932)
 * Going Abroad (1934)
 * I Would Be Private (1937)
 * And No Man's Wit (1940)
 * The World My Wilderness (1950) William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd
 * The Towers of Trebizond (1956) William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd

Non-fiction

 * A Casual Commentary (1925)
 * Some Religious Elements in English Literature (1931)
 * Milton (1934)
 * Personal Pleasures (1935)
 * The Minor Pleasures of Life (1936)
 * An Open Letter (1937)
 * The Writings of E.M. Forster (1938)
 * Life Among the English (1942)
 * Southey in Portugal (1945)
 * They Went to Portugal (1946)
 * Evelyn Waugh (1946)
 * Fabled Shore: From the Pyrenees to Portugal By Road (1949)
 * Pleasure of Ruins (1953)
 * Coming to London (1957)
 * Letters to a Friend 1950–52 (1961)
 * Last letters to a friend 1952–1958 (1962)
 * Letters to a Sister (1964)
 * They Went to Portugal Too (1990) (The second part of They Went to Portugal, not published with the 1946 edition because of paper restrictions.)

Works about Macaulay

 * "Rose Macaulay and Women" (1926), an essay by Stuart Pratt Sherman