Books by Wilkie Collins

Portrait of Wilkie Collins

Wilkie Collins, a master of Victorian sensation fiction, transformed the nineteenth‑century novel with his deft blend of mystery, social realism, and psychological depth. Best known for pioneering detective narratives such as *The Woman in White* and *The Moonstone*, his work probes the boundaries between respectability and transgression, exposing the hidden tensions of domestic life and the moral ambiguities of his age.

Collins's storytelling remains as compelling to modern readers as it was to his contemporaries. His intricate plots, vivid characterisation, and sharp commentary on class and gender ensure that each tale offers both suspense and insight. Whether rediscovering a classic or exploring a lesser‑known gem, readers step into a world where every secret has consequence and every revelation reshapes the truth.

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225 products


  • Poor Miss Finch Oxford Worlds Classics

    Oxford University Press Poor Miss Finch Oxford Worlds Classics

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Reviewpraiseworthy novel ... it is well worth exhuming * David Holloway, Sunday Telegraph *

    2 in stock

    £9.99

  • The Frozen Deep

    Alma Books Ltd The Frozen Deep

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFrank Aldersley becomes engaged to Clara Burnham on the eve of his departure on a journey to discover the Northwest Passage. Unbeknownst to him, Richard Wardour, his spurned rival, joins the crew of another ship belonging to the same expedition. When the ships get trapped in the ice and the men are randomly drawn into the same search party, Richard finds himself torn between his desire for revenge and the need for solidarity in the face of adversity. Based on an actual doomed mission to the Arctic captained by Sir John Franklin, and initially written for the stage in collaboration with Dickens – who also acted in the play – The Frozen Deep is an action-packed tale of vengeance and sacrifice.Trade ReviewYou can’t help feeling that Wilkie Collins was more in tune with modernity than his friend Charles Dickens. * The Guardian *

    1 in stock

    £5.99

  • The Dream Woman

    Alma Books Ltd The Dream Woman

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhen Francis Raven is roused from his sleep on the eve of his birthday and confronted by the sight of a woman trying to stab him, he is unsure whether she is real or an apparition. Years later, against the wishes of his mother, he marries Alicia, a woman with a strange resemblance to the mysterious visitor, who ends up attacking him on his birthday, before vanishing from his life. Is Francis's wife a ghost, a demon or a living human being? And will the prophecy of the night-time visitation be fulfilled one day? Originally published in Household Words in 1855 as 'The Ostler', but recast and expanded two decades later, The Dream Woman is a powerfully dark and suspenseful multi-narrative novella from the master of the mystery genre and the author of some of the most enduringly popular novels of the Victorian era.Trade ReviewA master of plot and situation. -- T.S. Eliot

    1 in stock

    £7.59

  • The Haunted Hotel: Annotated Edition

    Alma Books Ltd The Haunted Hotel: Annotated Edition

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn enigmatic countess is tormented by a dark secret. An English aristocrat, Lord Montbarry, falls ill and dies in a decaying Venetian palazzo. An Italian servant disappears, and his wife receives a note containing one thousand pounds. With the palazzo now transformed into a luxury hotel, and the late Lord Montbarry’s family in residence, these strands begin to come together, yet strange and macabre events are occurring, and the dead seem unable to rest.Trade ReviewWilkie Collins is the finest practitioner of the novel of sensation. * The Daily Telegraph *

    1 in stock

    £6.99

  • The Haunted Hotel

    Double 9 Booksllp The Haunted Hotel

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Haunted Hotel is a less popular work - a gothic story with fascinating characters, tormented rooms, and outrageous relationships.Without ruining the plot, there is a great deal to making it an exciting read. A secretive marriage, a hated darling, contention between siblings, missing workers, and apparition dreams - a lot of Victorian goodness!Collins makes a considerable lot of compassion toward practically every person in the book. Disdaining any character is difficult. A homicide is committed in the main portion of the book. Our criminal investigator for this situation is the despised sweetheart, accidentally maneuvered into the standard story. As a peruse, you might have proactively arranged your cast into malicious and heavenly, however, one can never be excessively certain.

    1 in stock

    £12.59

  • The Black Robe

    Double 9 Booksllp The Black Robe

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Black Robe is an 1881 epistolary ( series of letters) novel by famous English writer, Wilkie Collins. The book relates the adversities of Lewis Romayne, and is also noted for a recognised anti-Catholic bias. In this amazing novel of relationships, psychological convolutions, and fraud, a priest comes between an responsive man and the young woman he loves. A high ranking Catholic priest plans to recover land knowing Church property. It analyses very patiently a intense friendship between two men, Lewis Romayne and Arthur Penrose, which in some ways transforms in its power the principal heterosexual relationship depicted in the work. The Black Robe is full of Victorian England's religious views and influences Collins' general commentary about domestic issues and the condition of women. Through the description of the Church's spiritual elite, its priests, and characters' comments, England's anti-Catholicism views are apparent. This book is a kind of enigma, though nobody is murdered. It is a combination of realist late-Victorian fiction with an advice of Gothic.

    1 in stock

    £16.79

  • The Moonstone  Second edition

    British Library, Historical Print Editions The Moonstone Second edition

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £16.14

  • The Moonstone

    Graphic Arts Books The Moonstone

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA sharp-witted detective investigates the mystery of a gem, plundered from India and now vanished in England, and discovers shifting motives, unreliable testimony and growing danger in this foundational classic of mystery fiction. The Moonstone justly occupies an exalted position as a groundbreaking novel that opened the way for a great deal of genre fiction, mysteries and thrillers, but it is far more than simply an influence upon later works. This is an epistolary novel with a number of diverse and clearly incised viewpoints, displaying the author’s skill with both character and the unveiling of the elements of a mystery plot. One of the characters is the detective charged with finding the thief who stole the Moonstone, a huge diamond with a bloody history, and he is a clear precursor to A.C. Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes. Another character, much remarked upon at the novel’s original release, suffers from opium addiction, depicted with frightening clarity by Collins, who dealt with that issue firsthand. The plot is sensational but relayed realistically and builds to one of the most unusual plot twists in mystery literature, made all the more remarkable by virtue of appearing in the genre’s earliest days. Initially serialized in Charles Dickens magazine All The Year Round, The Moonstone was published in 1868 and has never been out of print since. With an eye-catching new cover, and professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of The Moonstone is both modern and readable.

    1 in stock

    £15.19

  • The Woman in White

    Fantom Films Limited The Woman in White

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £12.11

  • Moonstone

    Real Reads Moonstone

    Book SynopsisWhen Rachel Verinder inherits the Moonstone from her uncle on her eighteenth birthday, the wonderful jewel is intended to make her rich and happy. So why is her mother so worried about this valuable gift? Rachel seems very fond of her cousin, Franklin Blake. When trouble strikes, why does she refuse his help? What has he done to offend her? Can Sergeant Cuff, the famous detective, solve the dangerous mystery of the Moonstone before it is too late?

    £8.20

  • The Moonstone

    Broadview Press Ltd The Moonstone

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisIntrigue, investigations, thievery, drugs and murder all make an appearance in Collins's classic who-done-it, The Moonstone. Published in serial form in 1868, it was inspired in part by a spectacular murder case widely reported in the early 1860s.Collins's story revolves around a diamond stolen from a Hindu holy place. On her eighteenth birthday, Rachel Verinder receives the diamond, but by the following morning the stone has been stolen again. As the story unravels through multiple eyewitness accounts, the elderly Sergeant Cuff—with a face "sharp as a hatchet"—looks for the culprit.One of Collins's best-loved novels, with an exciting plot moved along by deftly-drawn characters and elegant pacing, The Moonstone was also turned into a play by Collins; the play appears as an appendix to this edition.Trade Review“This superbly edited and richly documented edition of what T.S. Eliot described as ‘the first and greatest of English detective novels’ is the definitive and indispensible edition of The Moonstone.” — William Baker, Northern Illinois University“The Moonstone, one of Wilkie Collins’s most popular and successful novels, has never been out of print since its first publication in 1868. Is another edition needed? The answer, in the case of Professor Farmer’s scholarly and impeccably edited text, must be a resounding yes. Invaluable for his survey of past and present reactions to the story, and for his own insights, the edition also includes historical and background material and a well-chosen collection of relevant contemporary documents—always an important feature of Broadview Literary Texts. This Moonstone will surely prove another winner for Broadview’s list.” — Catherine Peters, author of The King of Inventors: A Life of Wilkie Collins“Steve Farmer’s Broadview edition will undoubtedly become the definitive edition of The Moonstone. [It] deserves a five star rating.” — The Wilkie Collins Society Journal“Here is a book which anyone with an interest in either Collins or Victorian literature in general will want to buy. The chief reason for this is Broadview’s exceptionally generous editorial policy in its series of Literary Texts, and the very good use that Steve Farmer has made of this generosity. In this edition, for a reasonable price, we are given not only a beautifully printed and error-free annotated text of the novel, but also a full introduction and over 150 pages of appendices. … This is the first time that Collins’ dramatic adaptation of the novel has been reprinted and this text alone is well worth the price of the book.” — Adrian J. Pinnington, Waseda University, Wilkie Collins Society JournalTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsIntroductionWilliam Wilkie Collins: A Brief ChronologyA Note on the TextThe MoonstoneAppendix A: Early Reviews of The Moonstone Geraldine Jewsbury, The Athenaeum (July 25, 1868) The Spectator (July 25, 1868) Nation (September 17, 1868) The Times (October 3, 1868) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine (October 1868) Lippincott’s Magazine (December 1868) Appendix B: Excerpts from Newspaper Accounts of the Constance Kent/Road-house Murder Case of 1860 The Times (July 3, 1860 to October 2, 1865) The Sommerset and Wilts Journal (July 21, 1860) Appendix C: Excerpts from The Times Accounts of the Major Murray/Northumberland Street Case of 1861 The Times (July 13, 1861 to July 26, 1861)Appendix D: Collins on Indians“A Sermon for Sepoys.” From Charles Dickens’s Household Words: A Weekly Journal (February 27, 1858)Appendix E: Letters by Collins Concerning The Moonstone (the Novel and the Play)Appendix F: The Moonstone (the Play)Appendix G: Reviews of the Olympic Theatre Performance of Collins’s The Moonstone The Times (September 21, 1877) The Illustrated London News (September 22, 1877) The Athenaeum (September 22, 1877) The Spirit of the Times, New York (October 6, 1877) Select Bibliography

    2 in stock

    £16.95

  • The Dead Alive

    Broadview Press Ltd The Dead Alive

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this 1874 novella, the celebrated British writer of sensation fiction tells the tale of two brothers sentenced to be executed for having committed a murder that never occurred, and of the efforts of the energetic Naomi Colebrook to ferret out the truth and save the two innocents. As editor Anna Clarke observes, Collins' work is both a compelling legal sensation thriller and an important transatlantic commentary on American life. Along with the text itself and an illuminating introduction, Clarke provides a range of background materials-including documents from the real-life Boorn murder trial that inspired the novella-in order to set the work in its historical context.Trade Review“This is a timely re-examination of Wilkie Collins’s The Dead Alive. Anna Clark has situated Collins’s novella within its nineteenth-century context in terms of the Boorn murder trial, which inspired its plot, and other contemporary materials, including reviews and illustrations. The introduction provides a clear overview of Collins’s work, as well as of the text under consideration, which makes this volume useful for both scholars and students. This is a welcome and exciting addition to Broadview’s indispensable Victorian literature series.” — Joanne Ella Parsons, Falmouth University“Wilkie Collins’s The Dead Alive is an incredibly teachable novella, and Anna Clark’s introduction helpfully situates it within a range of historical contexts. This little-known text—advertised as Collins’s ‘first American story’ and based on an actual 1819 Vermont trial—is distinct within Collins’s oeuvre. The bold Naomi Colebrook prefigures Collins’s detective-heroine Valeria Woodville in The Law and the Lady but is also depicted as a uniquely American heroine. The contextual material that Clark provides, including reviews and reports of the real-life trial, position The Dead Alive as a significant experiment in transatlantic, legal, and sensational writing.” — Tara MacDonald, University of IdahoTable of Contents Introduction William Wilkie Collins The Dead Alive in Context A Note on the Text The Dead Alive In Context The Boorn Murder Trial from Leonard Sargent, The Trial, Confessions and Conviction of Jesse and Stephen Boorn, for the Murder of Russell Colvin, and the Return of the Man Supposed to Have Been Murdered (1873) from Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York, Seventieth Session, "Report of the Select Committee on the Abolishment of Capital Punishment" (5 March 1847) from Lemuel Haynes, "The Prisoner Released. A Sermon delivered at Manchester, Vermont, Lord's Day, Man. 9th, 1820, on the remarkable interpositin of Divine Providence in the deliverance of Stephen and Jesse Boorn, who had been under sentence of death for the supposed murder of Russell Colvin." In Sketches of the Life and Character of Rev. Lemuel Haynes, A.M., by Timothy Mather Cooley (1837) On the American Character from Alexis de Tocqueville, "Of the Principal Source of Belief Among Democratc Nations," Democracy in America, vol. 2, trans. Henry Reeve (1841) from Charles Dickens, American Notes (1842) American Reviews from "The Dead Alive" (Review), Cincinnati Daily Enquirer (4 January 1874) from "New Publications" (Review of The Dead Alive), Christian Watchman (5 February 1874) from "Literariana" (Review of The Dead Alive), The Daily Graphic (18 February 1874) from "New Publications" (Review of The Dead Alive), The Christian Register (21 February 1874) from "Novels of the Week" (Review of The Frozen Deep, and Other Stories), The Athenaeum (21 November 1874) Advertising, Illustrations from The Commercial Advertiser (3 January 1874) Illustrations from Shepard and Gill edition of The Dead Alive Acknowledgments

    2 in stock

    £17.05

  • The Woman in White Introduction by Nicholas Rance

    Random House USA Inc The Woman in White Introduction by Nicholas Rance

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisWilkie Collins''s classic thriller took the world by storm on its first appearance in 1859, with everything from dances to perfumes to dresses named in honor of the woman in white.  The novel''s continuing fascination stems in part from a distinctive blend of melodrama, comedy, and realism; and in part from the power of its story.     The catalyst for the mystery is Walter Hartright''s encounter on a moonlit road with a mysterious woman dressed head to toe in white.  She is in a state of confusion and distress, and when Hartright helps her find her way back to London she warns him against an unnamed man of rank and title.  Hartright soon learns that she may have escaped from an asylum and finds to his amazement that her story may be connected to that of the woman he secretly loves.  Collins brilliantly uses the device of multiple narrators to weave a story in which no one can be trusted, and he also famously creates, in the figure

    10 in stock

    £22.10

  • The Evil Genius

    Broadview Press Ltd The Evil Genius

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWilkie Collins is best known for his great mystery The Moonstone and The Woman in White—and for a life as sensational as are those novels. (The writer who famously advised other novelists to ‘make ‘em laugh, make ‘em cry, make ‘em wait’ is now known to have kept entire households in different parts of England going simultaneously.) Yet Collins also wrote a succession of extraordinarily powerful novels of private life; of these The Evil Genius is among the finest.The story is motivated by the attraction between Herbert Linley and the woman he hires as governess for his child Kitty—the long suffering Sydney Westerfield. As one expects with Collins, the story is driven forward with deft assurance. Yet he also treats the theme of adultery and divorce in a manner quite unconventional for his time—and, remarkably, he manages to draw readers into a sympathetic understanding of both of the main female characters: the offending governess and the aggrieved wife.The Evil Genius was a very considerable success when first published; indeed, it brought Collins more financially than any of his other works. Over a century later its sinews retain the strength to speak powerfully to the reader; lively and intelligent, it is perhaps the finest of Collins’ later novels.Trade Review“Collins’ boldness in drawing sympathetic portraits of both the wife and ‘the other woman’ is astonishingly modern. The novel well deserves to be brought back into print.” — Catherine Peters, Oxford UniversityTable of ContentsIntroductionFootnotesA Note on the TextSelected BibliographyWilliam Wilkie Collins: A Brief ChronologyThe Evil GeniusAppendix: Contemporary DocumentsExplanatory Notes

    1 in stock

    £26.06

  • Heart and Science: A Story of the Present Time

    Broadview Press Ltd Heart and Science: A Story of the Present Time

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWilkie Collins's later novels are often as concerned with social issues as they are with simple storytelling—but as more and more critics are suggesting, the best of them are as readable and thought-provoking today as they were when they first appeared. Of none is this more true than of his 1883 novel Heart and Science, which Collins himself placed alongside his masterpiece The Woman in White.Heart and Science turns on the fate of the orphaned Carmina Graywell, who is left in the charge of her aunt and guardian Mrs. Gallilee when her fiancé is forced to take an extended trip to Canada's drier climes in order to recover his health. Over the issue of her inheritance Mrs. Gallilee schemes to manipulate, control and ultimately destroy the naïve but strong-willed Carmina. The story is complicated by the machinations of Dr. Benjulia, a dark genius whose passionate devotion to the study of diseases of the brain leads him to encourage the progress of Carmina's life-threatening brain illness for the sake of scientific observation; the narrative builds to a pair of spectacularly lurid climactic scenes.Collin's novel tackles the debate over what he termed ‘the hideous secrets of Vivisection' with a passionate intensity aroused in large part by the sensational 1880s case of a doctor who was acquitted on charges laid under the new Cruelty to Animals Act of having practiced live experimentation on animals without a license. Excerpts from a contemporary account of this trial, together with other documents relating to the vivisectionist controversy and a variety of contemporary reviews of the book, are included among the appendices of this volume. The edition also includes a full introduction, chronology, explanatory notes and a note on the text.Heart and Science's story of the struggle between strong-willed women will strike chords of sympathetic understanding with modern readers—as will its vivisectionist theme, with it's clear parallels to the animal welfare/ animal rights debates of today.Trade ReviewThis is an important novel of historical and cultural as well as literary interest, and one which every Victorian scholar will find indispensable. Broadview Press has quickly become a leader in the field of producing the best editions of canonical and non-canonical nineteenth-century British literary texts, and Steve Farmer's Heart and Science is no exception." - Rick Simmons, University of South Carolina"engaging...suspenseful" - The Washington PostTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsIntroductionA Note on the TextPhotographs of Collins’s ManuscriptWilkie Collins: A Brief ChronologyPrefaceHeart and ScienceAppendix A: Reviews of Heart and ScienceAppendix B: The Vivisection Debate of the 1870s and 1880sAppendix C: Frances Power Cobbe’s Account of the Ferrier TrialAppendix D: Author’s letters about Heart and ScienceAppendix E: From A.C. Swinburne’s Obituary Notice on CollinsAppendix F: The Times’s Notice of Professor Helmholtz’s Visit to London, 12 April 1881Appendix G: Belgravia serial part divisions and corresponding page numbers in this editionAppendix H: Robert Browning’s Anti-vivisectionist poetrySelect Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £27.86

  • Blind Love

    Broadview Press Ltd Blind Love

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBlind Love is Wilkie Collins’s final novel. Although he did not live to complete the work, he left detailed plans for the last third of this absorbingly plotted novel which were faithfully executed by his colleague, the popular author Walter Besant. The novel is set during the Irish Land War of the early 1880s and tells the story of Iris Henley, an independent young woman who marries the “wild” Lord Harry Norland, a member of an Irish secret society, and becomes unhappily drawn into a conspiracy plot.The Broadview edition of Blind Love includes a critical introduction and primary source materials that address the novel’s focus on movements for Irish independence. Appendices include newspaper accounts of Ireland during the Land War and of the fraud case on which Collins based his story, articles reacting to Collins’s sudden death, Punch cartoons depicting the English attitudes toward the Irish, and contemporary reviews.Trade Review“This edition of Collins’s Blind Love offers the best of modern scholarship—it is impossible to praise it too much. Professors Bachman and Cox add considerably to Broadview’s series of reasonably-priced fine scholarly editions.” — A.D. Hutter, UCLATable of ContentsAcknowledgementsHistorical Context: The Irish QuestionWilkie Collins’s Response to the Irish QuestionAnglo-Saxon vs. Celt: The Imperialist AgendaWilkie Collins and the “Woman Question”The Von Scheurer FraudBlind Love: The History and Evolution of the TextWilliam Wilkie Collins: A Brief ChronologyA Note on the TextBlind LoveAppendix A: Reaction to the Death of Wilkie Collins “Death of Mr.Wilkie Collins,” The Times, 24 September 1889 “The Late Mr.Wilkie Collins,” The Illustrated London News, 28 September 1889 “Obituary.Wilkie Collins,” The Academy, 28 September 1889 Appendix B: Contemporary Reviews of Collins’s Work Edmund Yates, “The Works of Wilkie Collins,” Temple Bar, August 1890 Meredith White Thompson,“Wilkie Collins,” The Spectator, 28 September 1889 George Cotterell, “New Novels,” The Academy, 15 March 1890 “Blind Love,” New York Tribune, 23 January 1890 Andrew Lang, “Mr. Wilkie Collins’s Novels,” Contemporary Review, January 1890 Harold Quilter, “In Memoriam Amici: Wilkie Collins,” The Universal Review, 5, 1889 Appendix C: Horace Pym’s Notes on the Von Scheurer CaseAppendix D: Newspaper Accounts of the Insurance Trial “The Scheurer Frauds,” The Times, 25 April 1888 “France,” The Times, 26 April 1888 “France,” The Times, 27 April 1888 Appendix E: The Prologue to “Iris,” Manuscript “C,” 1887Appendix F: Excerpts from Collins’s Plans for Blind Love: The Synopsis The Cast of Characters The Synopsis Appendix G: The Irish Question Accounts from The Times, 1882 The Irish as Depicted in Punch, 1866, 1881, 1882 Appendix H: The Duties of the Lady’s MaidSelect Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £27.86

  • The Woman in White

    Broadview Press Ltd The Woman in White

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisAs the inscription on his tombstone reveals, Wilkie Collins wanted to be remembered as the "author of The Woman in White," for it was this novel that secured his reputation during his lifetime. The novel begins with a drawing teacher's eerie late-night encounter with a mysterious woman in white, and then follows his love for Laura Fairlie, a young woman who is falsely incarcerated in an asylum by her husband, Sir Percival Glyde, and his sinister accomplice, Count Fosco.This edition returns to the original text that galvanized England when it was published in serial form in All the Year Round magazine in 1860. Three different prefaces Collins wrote for the novel, as well as two of his essays on the book's composition, are reprinted, along with nine illustrations. The appendices include contemporary reviews, along with essays on lunacy, asylums, mesmerism, and the rights of women.Trade ReviewThis is an excellent edition of The Woman in White. It has been prepared with great thoroughness by two editors well versed in Collins studies and give the earliest published version of Collins's text. It provides a lengthy introduction covering most of the important issues raised by the novel. The annotations have been carefully researched and the various appendices succeed in furnishing the reader with exactly the right sort of contextual and background matter to give a better understanding of the story." - Andrew Gasson, Chairman, Wilkie Collins Society"To convey the sensationalism of The Woman in White, Bachman and Cox wisely choose the original, serialized version as their copy text. A thoughtful introduction places the novel in context, explaining its importance to sensation fiction, outlining its concern with the problem of identity and with constructions of madness, and discussing its narrative structure as well as its later stage adaptation. The appendices are especially useful, with their material on Victorian gender ideologies and Victorian psychology, including letters, articles, and reports illuminating the 'panic' over false incarceration for insanity." - Lillian Nayder, Bates CollegeTable of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction William Wilkie Collins: A Brief Chronology A Note on the TextThe Woman in WhiteAppendix A: Prefaces to the Novel Preface, 1860, Sampson Low, Son & Co., Three-volume Edition Preface to the Present Edition, 1861, Sampson Low, Son & Co., One-volume Edition Preface. La Femme en Blanc, 1861, trans. E.D. Forgues, J. Hetzel (Paris) Appendix B: Sample Page from All the Year RoundAppendix C: Commentary and Reviews of The Woman in White The Opinions of Charles Dickens Unsigned Review, Saturday Review (25 August 1860) Unsigned Review [E.S. Dallas], The Times (30 October 1860) “Awful Apparition,” Punch (6 April 1861) Unsigned Review [Mrs. Oliphant], Blackwood’s Magazine (May 1862) Edmund Yates, “Mr. Wilkie Collins in Gloucester Place,” in Celebrities at Home (1879) Wilkie Collins, “How I Write My Books: Related in a Letter to a Friend,” The Globe (26 November 1887) F.W. Waddy, “He Wrote ‘The Woman in White,’” Once a Week (24 February 1872) Appendix D: The Woman Question From William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–69) From Sarah Stickney Ellis, The Women of England,Their Social Duties, and Domestic Habits (1839) From John Ruskin, Sesame and Lilies, 1865 (1907) From Caroline Norton, A Letter to the Queen (1855) Appendix E: The Lunacy Panic of 1858 and the Mesmeric Mania of 1851 “Lady Bulwer Lytton,” The Times (19 July 1858) “Commission of Lunacy,” The Times (27 July 1858) [Editorial], The Times (28 July 1858) “The Tragedy of Acomb House,” The Sunday Times (1 August 1858) “The Mad-House System,” The Sunday Times (15 August 1858) “Lunatic Asylums and the Lunacy Laws (By a Physician),” The Times (19 August 1858) “Commission in Lunacy,” The Sunday Times (29 August 1858) “Law and Lunacy,” Punch (25 January 1862) “Mesmerism; Its Dangers and Curiosities,” Punch (24 February 1844) Anonymous, “Electro-biology,” Westminster Review (1851) Wilkie Collins, “Magnetic Evenings At Home” (Letter I), The Leader (17 January 1852) Select Bibliography

    2 in stock

    £18.95

  • The Moonstone

    Flame Tree Publishing The Moonstone

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA thrilling tale of mystery and crime from a master storyteller. A pacy tale from the original master of detective fiction Wilkie Collins. Transported from the temples of India to atmospheric Victorian England, the scene is set for a tale which twists between death, drugs, mystery and, most of all, misdirection. Rachel inherits the moonstone from her uncle on her 18th birthday, a cursed diamond of sacred importance stolen from India. When the stone goes missing, Sergeant Cuff is faced with a myriad of possible culprits, from mysterious Indian jugglers who may not be all they seem, to a very oddly acting maidservant. Told from the viewpoints of various vivid characters, Collins spins a tale of intrigue with many a wrong-turn as the moonstone leaves a path of destruction in its wake.FLAME TREE 451: From mystery to crime, supernatural to horror and fantasy to science fiction, Flame Tree 451 offers a healthy diet of werewolves and mechanical men, blood-lusty vampires, dastardly villains, mad scientists, secret worlds, lost civilizations and escapist fantasies. Discover a storehouse of tales gathered specifically for the reader of the fantastic. Each book features a brand new biography and glossary of Literary, Gothic and Victorian terms.

    1 in stock

    £11.52

  • Lulu.com The Haunted Hotel

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  • Legare Street Press The Moonstone

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