Posts Tagged ‘Elizabeth Gaskell’
Posted by demonik on October 31, 2012
Marie O’Regan (ed.) – The Mammoth Book Of Ghost Stories By Women (Robinson, Nov. 2012)

Acknowledgements
Marie O’Regan – Introduction
Kim Lakin-Smith – Field Of The Dead
Sarah Pinborough – Collect Call
Kelley Armstrong – Dead Flowers By The Roadside
Mary Elizabeth Braddon – The Shadow In The Corner
Caitlan R. Kiernan – The Madam Of The Narrow Houses
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman – The Lost Ghost
Sarah Langan – The Ninth Witch
Elizabeth Massie – Sister, Shhh …
Alex Bell – The Fifth Bedroom
Alison Littlewood – Scairt
Nina Allan – Seeing Nancy
Lisa Tuttle – The Third Person
Nancy Holder – Freeze Out
Yvonne Navarro – Return
Mary Cholmondeley – Let Loose
Marion Arnott – Another One In The Cold
Lilith Saintcrow – My Moira
Nancy Kilpatrick – Forgive Us
Muriel Gray – Front Row Rider
Cynthia Asquith – God Grant That She Lye Still
Amelia B. Edwards – The Phantom Coach
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Gail Z. Martin – Among The Shoals Forever
Edith Wharton – Afterward
Gaie Sebold – A Silver Music
Author Biographies
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Marie O'Regan | Tagged: Alex Bell, Alison Littlewood, Amelia B. Edwards, Caitlan R. Kiernan, Cynthia Asquith, Edith Wharton, Elizabeth Gaskell, Elizabeth Massie, fiction, Gaie Sebold, Gail Z. Martin, Ghost Stories, Kelley Armstrong, Kim Lakin-Smith, Lilith Saintcrow, Lisa Tuttle, Marie O'Regan, Marion Arnott, Mary Cholmondeley, Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman), Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Muriel Gray, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Nina Allan, Robinson, Sarah Langan, Sarah Pinborough, Vault Of Evil, Yvonne Navarro | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on January 31, 2011
Readers Digest – Great Ghost Stories (Readers Digest, 1997)

Robert Wheeler & Tony Stone
The Editors – Introduction
Robert Aickman – Ringing The Changes
Cynthia Asquith – The Corner Shop
A. L. Barker – The Whip Hand
Ambrose Bierce – A Tough Tussle
Algernon Blackwood – Transition
Ray Bradbury – The Crowd
Ann Bridge – The Buick Saloon
Rhoda Broughton – The Truth, The Whole Truth And Nothing But The Truth
A. M. Burrage – Smee
A. S. Byatt – The July Ghost
B. M. Croker – ‘To Let’
Robertson Davies – The Ghost Who Vanished By Degrees
Walter de la Mare – Seaton’s Aunt
Charles Dickens – No. 1 Branch Line: The Signalman
Lord Dunsany – August Cricket
Elizabeth Fancett – The Ghost Of Calagou
Frederick Forsyth – The Shepherd
Shamus Frazer – Florinda
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Graham Greene – A Little Place Of The Edgware Road
L. P. Hartley – Someone In The Lift
William Hope Hodgson – The Gateway Of The Monster
Thomas Hood – The Shadow Of A Shade
Holloway Horn – The Old Man
Elizabeth Jane Howard – Three Miles Up
Henry James – The Romance Of Certain Old Clothes
M. R. James – The Ash Tree
Rudyard Kipling – The Phantom Rickshaw
Marghanita Laski – The Tower
J. S. le Fanu – Shalken The Painter
Penelope Lively – Black Dog
Alison Lurie – The Highboy
W. Somerset Maugham – The Taipan
Guy de Maupassant – An Apparition
E. Nesbit – Man-size In Marble
Edgar Allan Poe – William Wilson
Alexander Pushkin – The Queen Of Spades
Jean Rhys – I Used To Live Here Once
Robert Louis Stevenson – The Body-snatcher
Bram Stoker – The Judge’s House
Elizabeth Taylor – Poor Girl
H. R. Wakefield – Blind Man’s Buff
Elizabeth Walter – Dual Control
Fay Weldon – Breakages
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
Emile Zola – Angeline, or The Haunted House
Blurb:
If you enjoy reading about elusive spirits and uncanny happenings, bizarre hauntings and malevolent ghosts, this is the volume for you. It brings together forty-six of the very best ghost stories ever written.
There are unforgettable classics from the great masters of the ghost story such as M. R. James, Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, Ambrose Bierce, Edith Nesbit and Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu. Then there are wonderfully macabre tales from world-famous authors such as Charles Dickens, Alexander Pushkin, Guy de Maupassant and Graham Greene, as well as gems from some of today’s best writers including Ray Bradbury, A. S. Byatt, Elizabeth Jane Howard, Penelope Lively, Fay Weldon and Frederick Forsyth.
This is a collection to entertain and intrigue, to terrify and to tantalise … to chill you to the bone. You have been warned!
Posted in *Readers Digest*, Anonymous | Tagged: A. L. Barker, A. M. Burrage, A. S. Byatt, Alexander Pushkin, Algernon Blackwood, Alison Lurie, Ambrose Bierce, Ann Bridge, B. M. Croker. Robertson Davies, Bram Stoker, Charles Dickens, Cynthia Asquith, E. Nesbit, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Fancett, Elizabeth Gaskell, Elizabeth Jane Howard, Elizabeth Taylor, Elizabeth Walter, Emile Zola, Fay Weldon, Frederick Forsyth, Graham Greene, Great Ghost Stories, Guy de Maupassant, H. R. Wakefield, Henry James, Holloway Horn, J S Le Fanu, Jean Rhys, L. P. Hartley, Lord Dunsany, M. R. James, Marghanita Laski, Oscar Wilde, Penelope Lively, Ray Bradbury, Readers Digest, Rhoda Broughton, Robert Aickman, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Shamus Frazer, Thomas Hood, Vault Of Evil, W.Somerset Maugham, Walter De La Mare, William Hope Hodgson | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 28, 2010
Michael Newton (ed.) – The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories: From Elizabeth Gaskell to Ambrose Bierce (Penguin, Feb 2010, £10.99)

Acknowledgements
Chronology Of The Ghost Story 1820-1914
Introduction
Further Reading
A Note On The Texts
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Fitz-James O’Brien – What Was It?
Edward Bulwer Lytton – The Haunted And The Haunters: or, The House And The Brain
Mary E. Braddon – The Cold Embrace
Amelia B. Edwards – The North Mail
Charles Dickens – No 1 Branch Line: The Signalman
J. S. Le Fanu – Green Tea
Harriet Beecher Stowe – The Ghost In The Cap’n Brown House
Robert Louis Stevenson – Thrawn Janet
Margaret Oliphant – The Open Door
Rudyard Kipling – At The End Of The Passage
Lafcadio Hearn – Nightmare Touch
W. W. Jacobs – The Monkey’s Paw
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman – The Wind In The Rose-Bush
M. R. James – “Oh Whistle, And I’ll Come To You, My Lad”
Ambrose Bierce – The Moonlit Road
Henry James – The Jolly Corner
Mary Austin – The Readjustment
Edith Wharton – Afterward
Glossary Of Scots Words
Biographical And Explanatory Notes
Blurb:
‘The ghost is the most enduring figure in supernatural fiction. He is absolutely indestructible… He changes with the styles in fiction but he never goes out of fashion. He is the really permanent citizen of the earth, for mortals, at best, are but transients’ – Dorothy Scarborough
This new selection of ghost stories, by Michael Newton, brings together the best of the genre. From Elizabeth Gaskell’s ‘The Old Nurse’s Story’ through to Edith Wharton’s ‘Afterword’, this collection covers all of the most terrifying tales of the genre. With a thoughtful introduction, and helpful notes, Newton places the stories contextually within the genre and elucidates the changing nature of the ghost story and how we interpret it.
Posted in *Penguin*, Michael Newton | Tagged: Ambrose Bierce, Amelia B. Edwards, Edith Wharton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Elizabeth Gaskell, fiction, Fitz-James O'Brien, ghost fiction, Ghost Stories, Henry James, Lafcadio Hearn, M. R. James, Margaret Oliphant, Mary Austin, Mary E. Braddon, Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman), Michael Newton, Penguin, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Vault Of Evil, W. W. Jacobs | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on March 12, 2010
The Wordsworth Book Of Horror Stories (Wordsworth Special Editions, 2005)

A. and C. Askew – Aylmer Vance And The Vampire
Honore de Balzac – The Mysterious Mansion
Richard Harris Barham – The Spectre Of Tappington
Ambrose Bierce – The Damned Thing
Miss Braddon – Eveline’s Visitant
A. Clergyman – A Ghostly Manifestation
————- Correspondence On ‘A Ghostly Manifestation’
Wilkie Collins – A Terribly Strange Bed
Charles Dickens – The Story Of The Bagman’s Uncle
————- To Be Taken With A Grain Of Salt
————- The Signalman
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – The Brazilian Cat
————- The Ring Of Thoth
————- The Lord Of Chateau Noir
————- The New Catacomb
————- The Case Of Lady Sannox
————- The Brown Hand
————- The Horror Of The Heights
————- The Terror Of Blue John Gap
————- The Captain Of The Polestar
————- How It Happened
————- Playing With Fire
————- The Leather Funnel
————- Lot No. 249
————- The Los Amigos Fiasco
————- The Nightmare Room
Amelia B. Edwards – The Phantom Coach
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Squire’s Story
W. F. Harvey – The Beast With Five Fingers
R. S. Hawker – The Botathen Ghost
Nathaniel Hawthorne – Young Goodman Brown
W. H. Hodgson – The Gateway Of The Monster
James Hogg – The Story Of Euphemia Hewit
Violet Hunt – The Prayer
W. W, Jacobs – The Monkey’s Paw
Henry James – The Jolly Corner
M. R. James – A School Story
————- Canon Alberic’s Scrapbook
————- Lost Hearts
————- The Mezzotint
————- The Ash Tree
————- Number 13
————- Count Magnus
————- ‘Oh, Whistle And I’ll Come To You, My Lad’
————- The Treasure Of Abbot Thomas
————- The Rose Garden
————- The Tractate Middoth
————- Casting The Runes
————- The Stalls Of Barchester Cathedral
————- Martin’s Close
————- Mr. Humphreys And His Inheritance
————- The Residence At Whitminster
————- The Diary Of Mr. Poynter
————- An Episode In Cathedral History
————- The Story Of A Disappearance And An Appearance
————- Two Doctors
————- The Haunted Dolls House
————- The Uncommon Prayer Book
————- A Neighbour’s Landmark
————- A View From A Hill
————- A Warning To The Curious
————- An Evening’s Entertainment
————- There Was A Man Dwelt By A Graveyard
————- Rats
————- After Dark In The Playing Fields
————- Wailing Well
————- Stories I Have Tried To Write
Rudyard Kipling – The Mark Of The Beast
Perceval Landon – Thurnley Abbey
John Lang – Fisher’s Ghost
D. H. Lawrence – The Rocking-Horse Winner
J. S. Le Fanu An Account Of Some Strange Disturbances In Aungier Street
————- Narrative Of The Ghost Of A Hand
————- Green Tea
————- Madam Crowl’s Ghost
————- Squire Toby’s Will
————- Dickon The Devil
————- The Child That Went With The Fairies
————- The White Cat Of Drumgunniol
————- Ghost Stories Of Chapelizod
————- Wicked Captain Walshawe, Of Wauling
————- Sir Dominick’s Bargain
————- Ultor De Lacy
————- The Vision Of Tom Chuff
————- Stories Of Lough Guir
Lord Lytton – The Haunted And The Haunters
Guy De Maupassant – Vendetta
E. Nesbit – Man-Size In Marble
Howard Pease – In The Cliff Land Of The Dane
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
————- The Black Cat
A. M. Pushkin – The Ace Of Spades
Saki (H. H. Munro) – Laura
————- Sredni Vashtar
Sir Walter Scott – The Tapestried Chamber
————- Wandering Willie’s Tale
Robert Louis Stevenson – Markheim
————- Thrawn Janet
Bram Stoker – Dracula’s Guest
Edmund Lenthal Swifte – Ghost In The Tower
William Makepeace Thackeray – The Story Of Mary Ancel
Hugh Walpole – Tarnhelm
Oscar Wilde – The Canterville Ghost
thanks to Severance of Vault for typing the contents!
Posted in *Wordsworth", Anonymous | Tagged: A. and C. Askew, A. Clergyman, A. M. Pushkin, Ambrose Bierce, Amelia B. Edwards, Bram Stoker, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, E. Nesbit, edgar allan poe, Edmund Lenthal Swifte, Elizabeth Gaskell, fiction, Guy de Maupassant, Henry James, Honore de Balzac. Wordsworth, horror, Howard Pease, Hugh Walpole, J S Le Fanu, Jacobs, James Hogg, John Lang, Lord Lytton, M. R. James, Miss Braddon, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oscar Wilde, Perceval Landon, R. S. Hawker, Richard Harris Barham, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Saki, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Walter Scott, Vault Of Evil, Violet Hunt, W. F. Harvey, W. H. Hodgson, W. W, Wilkie Collins, William Makepeace Thackeray, Wordsworth Editions | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 20, 2009
Anon – A Century Of Thrillers: From Poe To Arlen (Daily Express, 1934)

James Agate – Foreword
Wilkie Collins – The Traveller’s Story of a Terribly Strange Bed
Wilkie Collins – Mad Monkton
Wilkie Collins – The Biter Bit
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – The Adventure of the Speckled Band
Mary Shelley – The Mortal Immortal
Micheal Arlen – The Gentleman from America
R. H. Barham – The Leech of Folkstone
R. H. Barham – Jerry Jarvis’ Wig
R. H. Barham – The Spectre of Tappington
R. H. Barham – Singular Passage in the Life of the Late Henry Harris, Doctor of Divinity
Mrs Henry Wood – The Ebony Box
A. J. Alan – My Adventure at Chiselhurst
A. J. Alan – The Hair
Edgar Allan Poe – The Gold Bug
Edgar Allan Poe – The Cask of Amontillado
Edgar Allan Poe – The Murders in the Rue Morgue
Edgar Allan Poe – The Mystery of the Marie Roget
Edgar Allan Poe – The Pit and the Pendulum
Edgar Allan Poe – Berenice
Edgar Allan Poe – William Wilson
Edgar Allan Poe – The Masque of the Red Death
Nathaniel Hawthorne – Roger Malvin’s Burial
Nathaniel Hawthorne – Dr Heidegger’s Experiment
Nathaniel Hawthorne – The Grey Champion
Sir Walter Scott – Wandering Willie’s Tale
Sir Walter Scott – The Two Drovers
W. W. Jacobs – The Monkeys Paw
J. S. Le Fanu – Sir Dominick Sarsfield
J. S. Le Fanu – Mr Justice Harbottle
J. S. Le Fanu – Green Tea
Oscar Wilde – The Birthday of the Infanta
Charles Dickens – The Trial For Murder
Charles Dickens – The Story of the Bagmans Murder
Charles Dickens – No 1 Branch Line, The Signalman
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Squires Story
J. S. Fletcher – The Lighthouse of Shivering Sand
Anthony Trollope – Malachi’s Cove
Lord Lytton – The Haunted and the Haunters
Frederick Marryat – The Story of the Greek Slave
Algernon Blackwood – The Woman’s Ghost Story
Algernon Blackwood – Secret Worship
Mrs Oliphant – The Open Door
Ambrose Bierce – The Suitable Surroundings
Ambrose Bierce – One of the Missing
Ambrose Bierce – The Affair at Coulters Notch
Ambrose Bierce – A Tough Tussle
Ambrose Bierce – A Horseman in the Sky
One of the evil clones i mentioned on an earlier Century post. According to E. F. Bleiler (The Guide To Supernatural Fiction, Kent State Universtity Press, 1983)
“The CENTURY volumes were one of the results of Depression newspaper wars in Great Britain in the 1930’s. Books of enormous size, they were given as premiums for subscriptions, then taken over by commercial publishing (Hutchinson’s mostly).”
And to think these days we’re happy with the occasional Belles of St. Trinians DVD ….
Posted in *Daily Express*, Anonymous | Tagged: *Daily Express*, A. J. Alan, Algernon Blackwood, Ambrose Bierce, Anthony Trollope, Charles Dickens, E. F. Bleiler, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Gaskell, fiction, Frederick Marryat, Ghost Stories, horror, J S Le Fanu, J. S. Fletcher, James Agate, Lord Lytton, Mary Shelley, Micheal Arlen, Mrs Henry Wood, Mrs. Oliphant, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oscar Wilde, R. H. Barham, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Walter Scott, Supernatural, Thrillers, Vault Of Evil, W. W. Jacobs, Wilkie Collins | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 16, 2009
Vere H. Collins – More Ghosts and Marvels: A Selection Of Uncanny Tales from Sir Walter Scott to Michael Arlen (H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1927)

Help! Cover Wanted!
Sir Walter Scott – The Tapestried Chamber
Edgar Allan Poe – The Facts In The Case Of M. Valdemar
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurses Story
Charles Dickens – No. 1 Branch Line: The Signalman
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – Squire Toby’s Will
George MacDonald – The Lady In The Mirror
Walter Besant & James Rice – The Case Of Mr. Lucraft
Henry James – The Great Good Place
F. Marion Crawford – The Upper Berth
Arthur Machen – The Novel Of The White Powder
H. G. Wells – The Door In The Wall
E. F. Benson – Negotium Perambulans
Algernon Blackwood – Running Wolf
Lord Dunsany – The Bureau D’Exchange De Main
Katherine Fullerton Gerould – Loquier’s Third Act
Michael Arlen – The Ancient Sin
Maurice Baring – Venus
R. S. Hawker – The Bothanon Ghost
John Metcalfe – Nightmare Jack
May Sinclair – Where Their Fire Is Not Quenched
Posted in *Oxford*, Vere H. Collins | Tagged: Algernon Blackwood, Arthur Machen, Charles Dickens, E. F. Benson, edgar allan poe, Elizabeth Gaskell, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, George MacDonald, Ghost Stories, H G Wells, Henry James, J. Sheridan Le fanu, James Rice, John Metcalfe, Katherine Fullerton Gerould, Lord Dunsany, Maurice Baring, May Sinclair, Michael Arlen, More Ghosts and Marvels, Oxford University Press, R. S. Hawker, Sir Walter Scott, Supernatural, Vault Of Evil, Vere H. Collins, Walter Besant | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on April 11, 2009
Richard Dalby (ed.) – The Virago Book Of Ghost Stories (Virago, 2006)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/i6.photobucket.com/albums/y218/haloofflies/viragoghosthardback1.jpg)
Cover illustration: Tina Mansuwan at CIA
Inside cover blurb:
Bringing together vintage tales from the outstandingly successful Virago anthologies The Virago Book of Ghost Storied (Volumes I and II) and Victorian Ghost Stories, comes this chilling new omnibus.
Lost loves, past enmities and unwanted memories mingle with the inexplicable as unquiet souls return to repay kindnesses, settle scores and haunt the imagination.
Featuring some of the finest writers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, these stories gather to haunt and horrify — an irresistible read for those with a taste for being spooked.
Preface – Richard Dalby
Charlotte Bronte – Napoleon And The Spectre
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Amelia B. Edwards – The Story Of Salome
Mrs Henry Wood – Reality Or Delusion?
Charlotte Riddell – The Old House In Vauxhall Walk
Margaret Oliphant – The Open Door
Ella D’Arcy – The Villa Lucienne
Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman) – The Vacant Lot
E. Nesbit – The Violet Car
Edith Wharton -The Eyes
May Sinclair – The Token
Richmal Crompton – Rosalind
Margery H. Lawrence – The Haunted Saucepan
Margaret Irwin – The Book
F. M. Mayor – Miss De Mannering Of Asham
Ann Bridge – The Station Road
Stella Gibbons – Roaring Tower
Elizabeth Bowen – The Happy Autumn Fields
Rosemary Timperley – The Mistress in Black
Celia Fremlin – Don’t Tell Cissie
Antonia Fraser – Who’s Been Sitting In My Car
Ruth Rendell – The Haunting Of Shawley Rectory
A. S. Byatt – The July Ghost
A. L. Barker – The Dream Of Fair Women
Penelope Lively – Black Dog
Rosemary Pardoe – The Chauffeur
Lisa St. Aubin De Teran – Diamond Jim
Angela Carter – Ashputtle
Elizabeth Fancett – The Ghost Of Calagou
Joan Aikin – The Traitor
Dorothy K. Haynes – Redundant
Notes on the authors
Posted in Richard Dalby | Tagged: *Virago*, A. L. Barker, A. S. Byatt, Amelia B. Edwards, Angela Carter, Ann Bridge, Antonia Fraser, Books, Celia Fremlin, Charlotte Bronte, Charlotte Riddell, Dorothy K. Haynes, E. Nesbit, Edith Wharton, Elizabeth Bowen, Elizabeth Fancett, Elizabeth Gaskell, Ella D’Arcy, F. M. Mayor, fiction, Ghost Stories, Joan Aikin, Lisa St. Aubin De Teran, Margaret Irwin, Margaret Oliphant, Margery H. Lawrence, Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman), May Sinclair, Mrs Henry Wood, Penelope Lively, Richard Dalby, Richmal Crompton, Rosemary Pardoe, Rosemary Timperley, Ruth Rendell, Stella Gibbons, Tina Mansuwan, Vault Of Evil, Women Authors | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 10, 2007
Richard Dalby (ed.) – The Virago Book Of Victorian Ghost Stories (Virago, 1988)

Preface – Richard Dalby
Introduction – Jennifer Uglow
Charlotte Bronte – Napoleon And The Spectre
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Dinah M. Mulock – The Last House In C— Street
Catherine Crowe – Round The Fire
Mary Elizabeth Braddon – The Cold Embrace
Rosa Mulholland – Not To Be Taken At Bedtime
Amelia B. Edwards – The Story Of Salome
Rhoda Broughton – The Truth, The Whole Truth And Nothing But The Truth
Mrs Henry Wood – Reality Or Delusion?
Vernon Lee – Winthrop’s Adventure
Charlotte Riddell – The Old House In Vauxhall Walk
Margaret Oliphant – The Open Door
Lanoe Falconer – Cecilia De Noel
Louisa Baldwin – Many Waters Cannot Quench Love
Violet Hunt – The Prayer
Mary Cholomondeley – Let Loose
Ella D’Arcy – The Villa Lucienne
Gertrude Atherton – The Striding Place
Willa Cattier – The Affair At Grover Station
Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman) – The Vacant Lot
Isabella Banks – Haunted!
Notes on the authors
Posted in *Virago*, Richard Dalby | Tagged: Amelia B. Edwards, Books, Catherine Crowe, Charlotte Bronte, Charlotte Riddell, Dinah M. Mulock, Elizabeth Gaskell, Ella D’Arcy, fiction, Gertrude Atherton, Ghost Stories, Isabella Banks, Jennifer Uglow, Lanoe Falconer, Louisa Baldwin, Margaret Oliphant, Mary Cholomondeley, Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman), Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Mrs Henry Wood, Rhoda Broughton, Richard Dalby, Rosa Mulholland, Vault Of Evil, Vernon Lee, Violet Hunt, Willa Cattier, Women Authors | Leave a Comment »