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Ellen Wood (2) (1814–1887)

Author of East Lynne

For other authors named Ellen Wood, see the disambiguation page.

Ellen Wood (2) has been aliased into Mrs. Henry Wood.

35+ Works 726 Members 20 Reviews 1 Favorited

Works by Ellen Wood

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into Mrs. Henry Wood.

The Valancourt Book of Victorian Christmas Ghost Stories (2016) — Contributor — 159 copies, 6 reviews
Agents & Spies Short Stories (Gothic Fantasy) (2018) — Contributor — 35 copies
Sisters in Crime: Early Crime and Mystery Stories by Women (2013) — Contributor — 18 copies, 1 review
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories: Volume 1 (2018) — Contributor — 15 copies
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories: Volume 6 (2020) — Contributor — 6 copies
Z duchami przy wigilijnym stole (2020) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Price, Ellen (birth)
Birthdate
1814-01-17
Date of death
1887-02-10
Burial location
Highgate Cemetery, London, England, UK
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Worcester, Worcestershire, England, UK
Place of death
London, England, UK
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Dauphiné, France
Occupations
novelist
short story writer
supernatural fiction writer
essayist
magazine editor
publisher
Short biography
Ellen Wood, née Price, was born in Worcester, England, a daughter of a prosperous glove manufacturer. She began writing in childhood. She was affected by a severe curvature of the spine and had to spend hours and days at a time on a reclining board or couch. The condition affected her growth, and she was under five feet in height as an adult. In 1836, she married Henry Wood, the head of a banking and shipping firm, with whom she had five children. They lived in the south of France for 20 years for his business. She contributed short stories to the New Monthly Magazine and Bentley’s Miscellany, under the name Mrs. Henry Wood, beginning with "Seven Years in the Wedded Life of a Roman Catholic," published in 1851. Around 1856, her husband left his business, and the the family moved to Upper Norwood in southeast London, where Ellen now began to write novels to support them. She produced more than 30 novels, many of which were vastly popular and successful. The best known is East Lynn (1861), a sensational bestseller adapted numerous times for the stage and film. She also wrote essays, reviews, and several works of supernatural fiction, including the often-anthologized story "Reality or Delusion?" (1868). In 1867, she bought Argosy magazine and published the works of contributors such as Hesba Stretton, Julia Kavanagh, Christina Rossetti, Sarah Doudney, and Rosa Nouchette Carey, as well as her own until her death.

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Reviews

20 reviews
A sensational Victorian novel that tackles jealousy, love triangles, mistaken identities, murder, and divorce, East Lynne was seven hundred pages of unputdownable. I was enthralled by the character of Lady Isabel Carlyle and her ill-fated life story. Not that she doesn’t hold some responsibility for her own fate, but was there ever a woman born under a less auspicious star?

For the Victorians, marriage was still a sacred institution and inviolable, divorce was a new idea and allowed only show more for the most immoral of infractions. For someone who wrote under the appellation, Mrs. Henry Wood, it must have been a struggle to understand what forces could compel a decent woman to end up with one. While there could be no doubt where Mrs. Wood stood on this, I thought she handled the subject in a fair and thoughtful manner and painted a sad and tragic, but not a villainous, figure in Lady Isabel.

I followed the story with relish beginning to end, and just when things seemed predictable, I found they weren’t. For anyone who enjoys the works of Elizabeth Braddon, Elizabeth Gaskell or Wilke Collins, I would say this book is a must.
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Mrs. Wood manages sterlingly to keep many pots on the boil at the same time as keeping a complicated plot stirred to the satisfaction of her readers. This is a high paced high action Victorian novel well suited to serialization, I would think. The characters are wonderful types and they are drawn with an expert eye, from the deeply loathsome , the sublimely tragic, the bad tempered and the completely noble.
The novel has everything to keep a reader interested and willing to continue. Those show more Victorians - they knew their language so well, they were inventive and understood perfectly what the reading public wanted - adultery, murder, rowdiness, fraud, cads aplenty, beautiful women, It's a triumph of good old story-telling. show less
Another Goodreads reviewer likened this book to a Victorian soap opera, and I think that is a very good description. It is dramatic and fast-paced, often utterly unlikely and outrageous. There is adultery, assumed identities, a murder-mystery, an election, a murder trial and so on and so on. Until the last few chapters I was ready to give this novel five stars, but unfortunately the ending with the two pious deaths was a bit too sentimental even for me.

I spent most of the story wondering show more what sort of a name Afy was - turns out it's short for Aphrodite. The writing is extremely accessible for a Victorian novel.

Highly recommended.
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I love Victorian fiction - Dickens, Trollope and all the other writers. For some reason I had never read anything by Mrs Henry Wood. so a year ago I downloaded 'East Lynne' to my Kindle. And there it sat, and sat, and sat - unread. A week ago, having finished a rather gory murder mystery I decided to have a change of tempo, and started reading it.

What a revelation! Within two chapters I was hooked. The TV Series Downton Abbey has taken the west by storm, and here is a novel that is better show more than Downton Abbey. 'East Lynne' would make the most amazing/fantastic TV series or film. It has everything: heroes, heroines, evil men, governesses, honour, murder, betrayal, loss of fortune, scheming servants, illegitimacy, Victorian social mores,repentance, forgiveness - as I said, it has everything and more.
I was hooked, couldn't wait to see what would happen next, the plot twisted and turned all the time.At the time it was written (1861) it was what was called a 'sensation novel' that did not mean a 'sensational' novel, but rather a novel where the story, characters, situation, plot and denouement raised 'sensations' such as anger, sympathy, tenderness etc within the reader. And to my mind it succeeded in spades! I would have awarded it the full 5 star status, but for the two rather overly sentimental death-bed scenes, which may well have been accurate given a Victorian perspective, but irritated me. A terrific read, not at all heavy and dreary - I heartily recommend it.
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½

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Works
35
Also by
8
Members
726
Popularity
#34,983
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
20
ISBNs
53
Languages
2
Favorited
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