Description: The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, edited by J. I. M. Stewart, Penguin Books, Baltimore, Maryland, 1966, 528 pp. Penguin English Library EL14. 1st printing. Cover art by J. M. W. Turner. The book lies flat and square. Some edge wear to front cover. Price penned out on lightly rubbed back cover. The pages are tanned with edge browning. Interior is free of any markings. Condition - Very Good Plus. 312488 Wilkie Collins(William Wilkie Collins)(1824 - 1889) William Wilkie Collins, author of the first detective novels in English, was born in 1824. The son of a respected landscape painter, he was named after his painter godfather, David Wilkie. Educated in London, Collins studied to become a barrister, although it was never his intention to practice, and by 1848 he had turned to writing, a number of short works appearing in Charles Dickens' periodicals, Household Words and later, All the Year Round. A first novel, Iolani, set in ancient Tahiti and involving sorcery and sacrifice, though perhaps written as early as 1844, was later rejected by publishers (and only rediscovered and published for the first time in 1999). His second novel, Antonina (1850), set in fifth-century Rome, was a popular success, before Collins' first venture into crime fiction with Basil (1852), a Gothic tale of doppelgangers, bigamy, and hidden family secrets. Developing at once detective fiction and the novel of sensation, Collins' exotic and gripping stories - often involving strong heroines, sinister locales, charlatans, and physical or psychological afflictions - became hugely popular with the reading public. His great novels appeared in the 1860s, when, at the height of his powers, Collins' wrote The Woman in White (1860), No Name (1862), Armadale (1866), and The Moonstone (1868). Unafraid to question Victorian social mores, Collins never married but maintained two families. He lived both with Caroline Graves (whom he met in a midnight encounter such as is described in The Woman in White), and with Martha Rudd. In later life, Collins became addicted to opium, and from 1870 to his death in 1889, his novels became concerned with social issues, and are considered inferior to his earlier output. However, in recent years, Collins' oeuvre has received renewed critical attention, a recent biography hailing him as the king of inventors. The Moonstone is a yellow diamond of unearthly beauty brought from India and given to Rachel Verrinder as an eighteenth birthday present, but the fabled diamond carries with it a terrible curse.
Price: 22.95 USD
Location: Staten Island, New York
End Time: 2024-12-01T02:00:13.000Z
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Year Printed: 1966
Modified Item: No
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Topic: Mystery
Binding: Softcover, Wraps
Region: North America
Illustrator: (cover art by J. M. W. Turner)
Author: Wilkie Collins
Subject: Literature & Fiction
Language: English
Character Family: Penguin English Library
Publisher: Penguin Books
Place of Publication: Baltimore, Maryland
Special Attributes: First Pelican Books Printing, First Penguin Paperback Printing