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      The Cambridge Companion to Sensation Fiction

      edited-book
      Cambridge University Press

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          Abstract

          In 1859 the popular novelist Wilkie Collins wrote of a ghostly woman, dressed from head to toe in white garments, laying her cold, thin hand on the shoulder of a young man as he walked home late one evening. His novel The Woman in White became hugely successful and popularised a style of writing that came to be known as sensation fiction. This Companion highlights the energy, the impact and the inventiveness of the novels that were written in 'sensational' style, including the work of Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Mrs Henry Wood and Florence Marryat. It contains fifteen specially-commissioned essays and includes a chronology and a guide to further reading. Accessible yet rigorous, this Companion questions what influenced the shape and texture of the sensation novel, and what its repercussions were both in the nineteenth century and up to the present day.

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          Book
          9780511675744
          9780521760744
          9780521157094
          November 05 2013
          October 17 2013
          10.1017/CCO9780511675744
          cbdc57e9-ee00-4f6a-b851-ff628496ae94
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