While there seem to be no extant portraits of Minifie, there are a number of caricatures by
James Gilray and
Isaac Cruikshank, stemming from a 1791 scandal involving Minifie's niece, novelist
Elizabeth Gunning (1769–1823) (see
Susannah Gunning). Minifie's role in the imbroglio, dubbed the "Gunninghiad" by
Horace Walpole, remains unknown. The caricatures, described by one commentator as "vicious," and while she may not generally be considered a significant writer within the
literary canon, her career has sparked interest among researchers interested in recovered women writers, popular fiction, sentimental novels, and the reading and publishing culture of the mid- to late eighteenth century. == Bibliography ==