County Cork-born author L. T. Meade (1844–1914) is the consummate example of the once extraordinarily popular and prolific Victorian writer who is now largely unknown—a scenario made all the more remarkable given the scale of her former success. Meade was a bestseller in her day, and reviews in the press often discussed a number of her books at once, such was the scale of her prolificacy. Yet not all commentators approved of the kinds of books Meade produced. This essay charts the vilification of Meade as the purveyor of potentially harmful writing for the young, and examines her assertive responses to such criticisms. Meade was forthright in her defence of her writing practices, her dedication to professionalism, and the tastes of her read...
The posthumously published *Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson* (1801) has been read as a final—but f...
This book of thirteen essays by leading scholars in the field is an impressive and valuable contribu...
At the fin de siècle, L. T. Meade distanced herself from her professional identity as a girls’ fict...
County Cork-born author L. T. Meade (1844–1914) is the consummate example of the once extraordinaril...
The Irish writers L.T. Meade and Alice Corkran were both editors of leading London-based girls’ peri...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s long career coincided with a shift in writing practices, as the Victorian l...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
Typically, a biography would be introduced as 'the most recent of the XXX series', but on occasions ...
While a very few female writers in the Victorian age have received careful attention from historians...
The posthumously published *Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson* (1801) has been read as a final—but f...
This book of thirteen essays by leading scholars in the field is an impressive and valuable contribu...
At the fin de siècle, L. T. Meade distanced herself from her professional identity as a girls’ fict...
County Cork-born author L. T. Meade (1844–1914) is the consummate example of the once extraordinaril...
The Irish writers L.T. Meade and Alice Corkran were both editors of leading London-based girls’ peri...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s long career coincided with a shift in writing practices, as the Victorian l...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
Typically, a biography would be introduced as 'the most recent of the XXX series', but on occasions ...
While a very few female writers in the Victorian age have received careful attention from historians...
The posthumously published *Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson* (1801) has been read as a final—but f...
This book of thirteen essays by leading scholars in the field is an impressive and valuable contribu...
At the fin de siècle, L. T. Meade distanced herself from her professional identity as a girls’ fict...