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Lassie
06-22-2006, 11:50 AM
hi!
I'm doing an english assignmen on 18-19th british writers and I'm supposed to choose a specific author to write an essay on. I would like to write about an author who isn't as well known as say Dickens or Wilde but still could be counted as more or less classical. any suggestions?

mono
06-22-2006, 01:00 PM
Hello, Lassie, welcome to the forum. :)
You have quite a few British authors to choose from, even if you desire someone not as popular as Charles Dickens, for example. George Eliot (also known as Mary Anne Evans) had a very interesting life worth researching, and would recommend her, if you search for someone fascinating. Others worth looking into: Charles Kingsley, Anthony Trollope, or William Makepeace Thackeray.
Good luck!

Whifflingpin
06-22-2006, 01:06 PM
C18th
Laurence Sterne - works include "Tristram Shandy," one of the funniest books written, as well as one of the most curiously constructed - well worth an essay.

Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - not a novelist, but certainly a writer - her collected letters are fascinating.

Toby Smollet

Henry Fielding

C19th

Sir Walter Scott - ughh - too well known, too little read.

W M Thackeray -

Anthony Hope - Apart from the well known and much filmed "Prisoner of Zenda" he wrote a number of romances (in the C19th meaning of the word) and social satires.

Mrs Craik (Dinah Mulock) - authoress of the once famed "John Halifax, Gentleman"

Charles Kingsley - Water Babies, Westward Ho!, etc

Henry Kingsley

RLS
A C-D

and so on, till "the Rudyards cease from kipling and the Haggards ride no more"

Sabo
06-23-2006, 05:02 PM
Laurence Sterne is definitely worth attention. Some passages of Shandy made me lol.

Horace Walpole (1717-97), father of gothic novel, might be interesting if you want to take a less traditional classic.

Charles Darnay
06-23-2006, 06:37 PM
I just started to ready The LIfe and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, and I agree that this would make for a most interesting essay.

If you're keen on doing someone not-so-known, you could try Ann Bronte (the forgotten sister), I've never read her work(s), are there more than one?

There is also Wilkie Collins - I think he's English

mtpspur
06-24-2006, 02:10 AM
Hobby horse time---Henry Rider Haggard---do King Solomon's Mines or get gutsy and try She. Dismounting horse now.

Daniel A. C.
06-24-2006, 06:54 PM
Just to add a few to the good list already mentioned:

You might take Mary Shelly (Frankenstein) or Jane Austen, perhaps if you wanted a female author.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Shelly
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Austen

Lewis Carrol (Alice in Wonderland) or Daniel Defoe (Robinson Crusoe) might be interesting.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Carrol
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Defoe