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Ainsworth, William Harrison, 1805-1882

We have 6 books for this author.

Sketch of William Harrison Ainsworth
Sketch of William Harrison Ainsworth
Caricature from Punch, 1881: "TO THE GREATEST AXE-AND-NECK-ROMANCER OF OUR TIME, WHO IS QUITE AT THE HEAD OF HIS PROFESSION, WE DEDICATE THIS BLOCK AD MULTOS ANNOS!
Caricature from Punch, 1881: "TO THE GREATEST AXE-AND-NECK-ROMANCER OF OUR TIME, WHO IS QUITE AT THE HEAD OF HIS PROFESSION, WE DEDICATE THIS BLOCK AD MULTOS ANNOS!

William Harrison Ainsworth (February 4, 1805 - January 3, 1882) was an English historical novelist. He was born in Manchester, the son of a solicitor. He went to the Manchester Grammar School before becoming trained in the law. However the legal profession had no attraction for him, and going to London to complete his studies he made the acquaintance of John Ebers, publisher, and at that time manager of the Opera House, by whom he was introduced to literary and dramatic circles, and whose daughter he afterwards married. For a short time he tried the publishing business, but soon gave it up and devoted himself to journalism and literature his first success as a writer of romance being scored with Rookwood in 1834, of which Dick Turpin is the leading character; and thenceforward he continued to pour forth till 1881 a stream of novels, to the number of 39. Tower of London was his fourth work, and, according to Ainsworth himself, it was written chiefly with the aim of interesting his fellow-countrymen in the historical associations of the Tower. Ainsworth died in Reigate on January 3, 1882.

Ainsworth depends for his effects on striking situations and powerful descriptions: he has little humour or power of delineating character.

Works

  • Rookwood (1834)
  • The Admirable Crichton (1837)
  • Jack Sheppard, available at Project Gutenberg. (1839)
  • The Tower of London (1840)
  • Old St Paul's, available at Project Gutenberg. (1841)
  • Windsor Castle, available at Project Gutenberg. (1843)
  • The Lancashire Witches, available at Project Gutenberg. (1849)
  • Guy Fawkes (1842)
  • The Star Chamber, vol. 1, available at Project Gutenberg.; The Star Chamber, vol. 2, available at Project Gutenberg. (1842)
  • The Flitch of Bacon (1842)
  • The Miser's Daughter (1842)
  • Auriol (1844)
  • Ovingdean Grange: a tale of the South Downs (1860)
  • The Constable of the Tower (1861)
  • Preston Fight or The Insurrection of 1715 (1875)
  • Chetwynd Calverley, A Tale (1876)
  • Mervyn Clitheroe (1898)

External links

References

  • Bleiler, Everett (1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature. Chicago: Shasta Publishers, 19. 

This biographical information was gathered from the William_Harrison_Ainsworth page, courtesy of the Wikipedia project.

Books

Jack Sheppard A Romance
The Lancashire Witches A Romance of Pendle Forest
Old Saint Paul's A Tale of the Plague and the Fire
The Star-Chamber, Volume 1 An Historical Romance
The Star-Chamber, Volume 2 An Historical Romance
Windsor Castle

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