Hilary St. Ives

1870 novel
Hilary St. Ives
AuthorWilliam Harrison Ainsworth
LanguageEnglish
GenreDrama
PublisherChapman and Hall
Publication date
1870
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint

Hilary St. Ives is an 1870 novel in three volumes by the British writer William Harrison Ainsworth. Originally serialised in The New Monthly Magazine during 1869, it was then published in London by Chapman and Hall.[1] [2] Although Ainsworth was best known for his historical novels, this was one of three novels in a row with contemporary settings along with Old Court (1867) and Myddleton Pomfret (1868).[3] Stylistically it borrows from the sensation novels popular at the time. He then returned to his more usual historical settings with Boscobel (1872) which takes place in the mid-seventeenth century.

References

  1. ^ Carver p.434
  2. ^ Slater p.18
  3. ^ Sutherland p.453

Bibliography

  • Carver, Stephen James. The Life and Works of the Lancashire Novelist William Harrison Ainsworth, 1850-1882. Edwin Mellen Press, 2003.
  • Slater, John Herbert. Early Editions: A Bibliographical Survey of the Works of Some Popular Modern Authors. K. Paul, Trench, Trubner, & Company, 1894.
  • Sutherland, Joan. The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Santford University Press, 1989.
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William Harrison Ainsworth
TopicsPeople
  • George Cruikshank
  • Charles Dickens
  • William Makepeace Thackeray
Novels
  • Rookwood (1834)
  • Crichton (1837)
  • Jack Sheppard (1839)
  • Guy Fawkes (1840)
  • The Tower of London (1840)
  • Old St. Paul's (1841)
  • The Miser's Daughter (1842)
  • Windsor Castle (1842)
  • St. James's (1844)
  • Auriol (1844)
  • The Lancashire Witches (1848)
  • James the Second (1848)
  • The Flitch of Bacon (1854)
  • The Spendthrift (1857)
  • The Constable of the Tower (1861)
  • John Law (1864)
  • The Spanish Match (1865)
  • Old Court (1867)
  • Myddleton Pomfret (1868)
  • Hilary St. Ives (1870)
  • Boscobel (1872)
  • Preston Fight (1875)
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