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    • English novelist and playwright

      • William Wilkie Collins (8 January 1824 – 23 September 1889) was an English novelist and playwright known especially for The Woman in White (1859), a mystery novel and early sensation novel, and for The Moonstone (1868), which established many of the ground rules of the modern detective novel and is also perhaps the earliest clear example of the police procedural genre.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilkie_Collins
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  2. William Wilkie Collins (8 January 1824 – 23 September 1889) was an English novelist and playwright known especially for The Woman in White (1859), a mystery novel and early sensation novel, and for The Moonstone (1868), which established many of the ground rules of the modern detective novel and is also perhaps the earliest clear example of ...

  3. Sep 19, 2024 · Wilkie Collins was an English sensation novelist, early master of the mystery story, and pioneer of detective fiction. The son of William Collins (1788–1847), the landscape painter, he developed a gift for inventing tales while still a schoolboy at a private boarding school. His first published.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Wilkie Collins was the elder son of William Collins the celebrated landscape artist and portrait painter and named after his godfather, Sir David Wilkie.

    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?1
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?2
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?3
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?4
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?5
  5. Jan 29, 2024 · Wilkie Collins drew on his legal training to dramatize the inequality caused by outdated laws regarding marital and property rights

    • Katherine Hobbs
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?1
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?2
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?3
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?4
    • Who was William Wilkie Collins?5
    • Early Years and Education
    • Early Literary Career
    • The Sensational School
    • Family and Personal Life
    • Published Works
    • Death and Legacy
    • Wilkie Collins Fast Facts
    • Sources

    Wilkie Collins (born William Wilkie Collins) was born on Jan. 8, 1824, on Cavendish Street in Marylebone, London. He was the eldest of two sons of William Collins, a landscape artist and a member of the Royal Academy, and his wife Harriet Geddes, a former governess. Collins was named after David Wilkie, the Scottish painter who was his godfather. A...

    Collins' first novel, Iolani, was rejected and didn't resurface until 1995, long after his death. His second novel, Antoninawas only one-third of the way finished when his father died. After the elder Collins' death, Wilkie Collins started work on a two-volume biography of his father, which was published by subscription in 1848. That biography brou...

    The "sensation genre" of writing was an early stage in the development of the detective novel. Sensational novels offered a hybrid of domestic fiction, melodrama, sensational journalism, and gothicromances. The plots contained elements of bigamy, fraudulent identity, drugging, and theft, all of which took place within the middle-class home. Sensati...

    Wilkie Collins never married. It has been speculated that his close knowledge of Charles and Catherine Dickens' unhappy marriage may have influenced him. In the mid-1850s, Collins began living with Caroline Graves, a widow with one daughter. Graves lived in Collins' house and looked after his domestic affairs for most of thirty years. In 1868, when...

    Over his lifetime, Collins wrote 30 novels and over 50 short stories, some of which were published in magazines edited by Charles Dickens. Collins also wrote a travel book (A Rogue's Life), and plays, the best-known of which is The Frozen Deep, an allegory of the failed Franklin expedition to find the Northwest Passageacross Canada.

    Wilkie Collins died in London on Sept. 23, 1889, at the age of 69, after having suffered a debilitating stroke. His will divided what proceeds were left from his writing career between his two partners, Graves and Rudd, and the Dawson children. The sensationalism genre faded in popularity after the 1860s. However, scholars credit sensationalism, es...

    Full Name: William Wilkie Collins
    Occupation: Author
    Known For: Bestselling detective novels and developing of the sensational genre of literature
    Born: January 8, 1824 in London, England
    Ashley, Robert P. "Wilkie Collins Reconsidered." Nineteenth-Century Fiction4.4 (1950): 265–73. Print.
    Baker, William, and William M. Clarke, eds. The Letters of Wilkie Collins: Volume 1: 1838–1865. MacMillan Press, LTD1999. Print.
    Clarke, William M. The Secret Life of Wilkie Collins: The Intimate Victorian Life of the Father of the Detective Story. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1988. Print.
    Lonoff, Sue. "Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins." Nineteenth-Century Fiction 35.2 (1980): 150–70. Print.
  6. Jan 8, 2024 · Considered one of the first writers of mysteries, and the father of detective fiction, Wilkie Collins used the genres to investigate the rapidly changing world around him, and to upend...

  7. Jun 27, 2018 · Collins, (William) Wilkie (182489) English novelist. He made important contributions to the development of detective fiction, especially in his two enduringly popular novels, The Woman in White (1860) and The Moonstone (1868). He collaborated with Charles Dickens in writing plays and stories.

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