Miss Braddon. . . was the first inventor of that gentle and amiable heroine, fair-haired, blue-eyed, and capable of every crime, who has been so often repeated since; and added a new specialité of character for the use of those lesser artists who follow a leader with such exasperating fidelity to all that can be copied. Miss Braddon, now Mrs. Maxwell, is perhaps the most complete story-teller of the whole, and has not confined herself to that or any other type of character, but has ranged widely over all English scenes and subjects, always with a power of interesting and occupying the public, which is one of the first qualities of the novelist. If it has ever happened to the reader to find himself, while travelling, out of the reach of books and left to the drift of cheap editions for the entertainment of his stray hours, he will then appreciate what it is, among the levity and insignificance of many of the younger writers, to find the name of Miss Braddon on a title-page, and know that he is likely to find some sense of life as a whole, and some reflection of the honest sentiments of humanity, amid the froth of flirtation and folly which has lately invaded, like a destroying flood, the realms of fiction. — Mrs. Oliphant, The Victorian Age in Literature (1892)
Biographical Materials
Literary Relations
- The Rediscovery of Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1835-1915) — "Queen of Sensation"
- The Conclusions of Lady Audley's Secret and The Mystery of Edwin Drood: Was Dickens Thinking of Using Braddon's Solution?
- Braddon and Hardy: The Return of the Native as Sensation Fiction
- Compared to Diana Mulock Craik
- Marie Corelli's Criticism of Braddon
Braddon and the Visual Arts
- Du Maurier provides an illustration for Lady Audley's Secret
Genre, Mode, and Style
- The Victorian Sensation Novel, 1860-1880 — "preaching to the nerves instead of the judgment" The Victorian Sensation Novel: Selected Bibliography of Secondary Materials
Theme, subject, and Technique
- Plot devices — encounters in a railway carriage
- Reclaiming of the place of individual agency and perception in the face of technology and implacaple bureaucracy
Social, Political, and Other Cultural Contexts
- Bigamy and Victorian Marriage Laws (needeed)
- Victorian women's occupations
- Timeline of Legislation, Events, and Publications Crucial to the Development of Victorian Feminism
- Victorian Social and Political History: An Overview
- The Cultural Context: Victorianism
- Science and Technology
- Victorian conceptions of physical and mental illness
Last modified 2 January 2007