Ackroyd, a prolific writer acclaimed for his histories of
London (London) and the
Thames (Thames), adds a new author to his oeuvre of great lives concisely chronicled. Here he synthesizes the high points of two dozen longer Wilkie Collins (1824–89) biographies in a conversational style. Collins is mostly known today only to Victorian literature aficionados and students, yet he was among the best-regarded writers of his time and an intimate of such luminaries as Charles Dickens and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. While beloved by his peers for his sensational story lines, as exemplified by
The Moonstone and
The Woman in White, Collins pushed both literary and societal boundaries. He is credited with penning the first English detective story, the first female detective in English literature, and the first detective novel. And while he never married, he supported two mistresses concurrently.
VERDICT Ackroyd's approachable narrative and the book's near-pocket size will appeal to Collins fans (and time-pressed students), but no new research is presented, therefore limiting the book's appeal to large public and academic libraries only.
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