Wilkie Collins is mainly remembered for his best-selling sensation novel The Woman in White and his detective mystery The Moonstone , both published in the 1860s. However, in a literary career spanning nearly forty years he wrote over twenty novels, several plays, and numerous short stories in which his preoccupations with Victorian society are revealed. Irregular liaisons, the chaotic state of the marriage laws, social and psychological identity, and the interconnections between respectable society and the world of crime are recurring themes in Collins's fiction. Lyn Pykett looks at Collins's long and varied career in relation to the changing circumstances of his own life, a changing literary marketplace, and the changing worlds of ninetee...
In 1861, in a review of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White, a critic for the Spectator complained t...
Focusing on the novels of Wilkie Collins, this thesis identifies the ways in which Collins’s narrati...
This thesis considers the relationship between the novels of Wilkie Collins and nineteenth-century p...
Wilkie Collins is mainly remembered for his best-selling sensation novel The Woman in White and his ...
Wilkie Collins was a master of the sensation fiction genre. He wrote multiple bestselling novels and...
This new biography focuses on the career of the popular Victorian novelist Wilkie Collins (1824-89) ...
As the sensation novel was reclaimed by literary critics and cultural historians as a legitimate sit...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
Wilkie Collins was, as this collection aims to show, an author who was not afraid to experiment with...
This thesis examines the work of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins in order to explicate the ways i...
This study analyzes and accounts for the mixed emotional responses to three Wilkie Collins novels: T...
The term "feminist," when applied to Wilkie Collins, implies he was concerned with rectifying the op...
Wilkie Collins is undeniably one of the initiators of the detective novel. The role he played in cre...
Victorian sensation fiction strives to go beyond its time through issues and characters that do not ...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
In 1861, in a review of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White, a critic for the Spectator complained t...
Focusing on the novels of Wilkie Collins, this thesis identifies the ways in which Collins’s narrati...
This thesis considers the relationship between the novels of Wilkie Collins and nineteenth-century p...
Wilkie Collins is mainly remembered for his best-selling sensation novel The Woman in White and his ...
Wilkie Collins was a master of the sensation fiction genre. He wrote multiple bestselling novels and...
This new biography focuses on the career of the popular Victorian novelist Wilkie Collins (1824-89) ...
As the sensation novel was reclaimed by literary critics and cultural historians as a legitimate sit...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
Wilkie Collins was, as this collection aims to show, an author who was not afraid to experiment with...
This thesis examines the work of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins in order to explicate the ways i...
This study analyzes and accounts for the mixed emotional responses to three Wilkie Collins novels: T...
The term "feminist," when applied to Wilkie Collins, implies he was concerned with rectifying the op...
Wilkie Collins is undeniably one of the initiators of the detective novel. The role he played in cre...
Victorian sensation fiction strives to go beyond its time through issues and characters that do not ...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
In 1861, in a review of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White, a critic for the Spectator complained t...
Focusing on the novels of Wilkie Collins, this thesis identifies the ways in which Collins’s narrati...
This thesis considers the relationship between the novels of Wilkie Collins and nineteenth-century p...