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Mary Elizabeth Braddon
<html> <head> <title>Mary Elizabeth Braddon</title> <meta name="googlebot" content="noodp"> <meta name="robots" content="noodp"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon-precomposed" href="/silly-nndb-icon.png" /><style type="text/css"> <!-- .fotmbar { color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: none} .fotmbar:hover { color: #FFFFFF; text-decoration: underline} .newslink { color: #000000; text-decoration: none} .newslink:hover { color: #000000; text-decoration: none} .proflink { color: #000000; text-decoration: none} .proflink:hover { color: blue; text-decoration: underline} .b1f, .b2f, .b3f, .b4f {font-size:1px; overflow:hidden; display:block;} .b1f {height:1px; background:#e6e6e6; margin:0 5px;} .b2f {height:1px; background:#e6e6e6; margin:0 3px;} .b3f {height:1px; background:#e6e6e6; margin:0 2px;} .b4f {height:2px; background:#e6e6e6; margin:0 1px;} .contentf {background: #e6e6e6; padding: 2px; } .contentf div {margin-left: 5px;} --> </style></head> <body bgcolor=#ffffff> <center> <table cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 border=0><tr><td valign=top><table width=550 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr><td bgcolor=white><table width="100%" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" background="/nndb.gif"> <tr> <td rowspan="2" align="left" valign="top"><a href="http://www.nndb.com/"><img src="/title.gif" width="260" height="50" border=0 alt="NNDB"></a></td> <td><table width="100%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6"> <tr align="center"> <td width="25%" nowrap><b><font size="-1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">This is a beta version of NNDB</font></b></td> </tr> </table></td> </tr> <tr> <td align="right" valign="middle"><b><font size="-1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"> <form action="http://search.nndb.com/search/nndb.cgi" method="get"> <input type="hidden" name="nndb" value="1"></input> <nobr>Search: <select name="omenu"> <option value="unspecified" selected>All Names</option> <option value="living">Living people</option> <option value="dead">Dead people</option> <option value="bands">Band Names</option> <option value="books">Book Titles</option> <option value="movies">Movie Titles</option> <option value="fulltext">Full Text</option> </select> for <input name="query" value="" size=24 maxlength=96> <input type=submit value="Search"> </font></b></nobr></form></td> </tr> </table> <!-- COPYRIGHT (C) 2008 SOYLENT COMMUNICATIONS --> <!-- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED --> <!-- NO PART OF THIS WEBSITE MAY BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION --> <!-- OF SOYLENT COMMUNICATIONS (ON THE WEB, IN PRINT, OR OTHERWISE) --> <!-- --> <!-- SOYLENT COMMUNICATIONS --> <!-- PO BOX 4436, MOUNTAIN VIEW CA 94040 USA --> </td></tr><tr><td bgcolor=red height=2></td></tr><map name=fool><area coords="102,0,240,14" href="/people/124/000102815/bibliography/" alt="bibliography"></map><tr bgcolor=F0F0F0><td bgcolor=F0F0F0 style="padding: 0px 15px 15px 15px;"><img src="/red-profile-2.gif" align="right" height=15 width=240 border=0 usemap=#fool><br clear="all"><table cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 width=100%><tr><td bgcolor=F0F0F0><font size=+3 face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Mary Elizabeth Braddon</b></font><p><img src="mary-elizabeth-braddon-1.jpg" height=320 width=243 align=right hspace=10 vspace=10 alt="Mary Elizabeth Braddon"><b>Born:</b> <a href="/lists/795/000106477/" class=proflink>4-Oct</a>-<a href="/lists/836/000105521/" class=proflink>1837</a><br><b>Birthplace:</b> <a href="/geo/881/000069674/" class=proflink>London, England</a><br><b>Died:</b> <a href="/lists/918/000106600/" class=proflink>4-Feb</a>-<a href="/lists/425/000106107/" class=proflink>1915</a><br><b>Location of death:</b> <a href="/geo/852/000069645/" class=proflink>Richmond, Surrey, England</a><br><b>Cause of death:</b> unspecified<br><p><b>Gender:</b> Female<br><b>Race or Ethnicity:</b> White<br><b>Sexual orientation:</b> Straight<br><b>Occupation:</b> Novelist<p><b>Nationality:</b> England<br><b>Executive summary:</b> <i>Lady Audley's Secret</i><p>English novelist, daughter of Henry Braddon, solicitor, of Skirdon Lodge, Cornwall, and sister of Sir Edward Braddon, prime minister of Tasmania, was born in London in 1837. She began at an early age to contribute to periodicals, and in 1861 produced her first novel, <i>The Trail of the Serpent</i>. In the same year appeared <i>Garibaldi</i>, accompanied by <i>Olivia</i>, and other poems, chiefly narrative, a volume of extremely spirited verse, deserving more notice than it has received. In 1862 her reputation as a novelist was made by a favorable review in <i>The Times</i> of <i>Lady Audley's Secret</i>. <i>Aurora Floyd</i>, a novel with a strong affinity to <i>Madame Bovary</i>, followed, and achieved equal success. Its immediate successors, <i>Eleanor's Victory</i>, <i>John Marchmont's Legacy</i>, <i>Henry Dunbar</i>, remain with her former works the best known of her novels, but all her numerous books have found a large and appreciative public. They give, indeed, the great body of readers of fiction exactly what they require; melodramatic in plot and character, conventional in their views of life, they are yet distinguished by constructive skill and opulence of invention. For a considerable time Braddon conducted <i>Belgravia</i>, In which several of her novels appeared. In 1874 she married John Maxwell, publisher, her son, W. B. Maxwell, afterwards becoming known as a clever novelist and newspaper correspondent. <p><b>Father:</b> Henry Braddon (solicitor)<br><b>Mother:</b> Fanny White<br><b>Brother:</b> Sir Edward Braddon (Prime Minister of Tasmania)<br><b>Husband:</b> John Maxwell (Irish publisher, m. 1874, six children)<br><b>Son:</b> William B. Maxwell (novelist)<br><p><b>Author of books:</b><br> <i>The Octoroon</i> (<tt>1861</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Black Band</i> (<tt>1861</tt>, novel)<br><i>Lady Audley's Secret</i> (<tt>1862</tt>, novel)<br><i>Aurora Floyd</i> (<tt>1863</tt>, novel)<br><i>Eleanor's Victory</i> (<tt>1863</tt>, novel)<br><i>John Marchmont's Legacy</i> (<tt>1863</tt>, novel)<br><i>Henry Dunbar: the Story of an Outcast</i> (<tt>1864</tt>, novel)<br><i>Circe</i> (<tt>1867</tt>, novel)<br><i>Dead-Sea Fruit</i> (<tt>1868</tt>, novel)<br><i>Fenton's Quest</i> (<tt>1871</tt>, novel)<br><i>To the Bitter End</i> (<tt>1872</tt>, novel)<br><i>Publicans and Sinners</i> (<tt>1873</tt>, novel)<br><i>Lost For Love</i> (<tt>1874</tt>, novel)<br><i>Hostages to Fortune</i> (<tt>1875</tt>, novel)<br><i>Dead Men's Shoes</i> (<tt>1876</tt>, novel)<br><i>An Open Verdict</i> (<tt>1878</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Cloven Foot</i> (<tt>1879</tt>, novel)<br><i>Vixen</i> (<tt>1879</tt>, novel)<br><i>Asphodel</i> (<tt>1881</tt>, novel)<br><i>Phantom Fortune</i> (<tt>1883</tt>, novel)<br><i>Ishmael. A Novel</i> (<tt>1884</tt>, novel)<br><i>Cut by the County</i> (<tt>1887</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Fatal Three</i> (<tt>1888</tt>, novel)<br><i>One Life, One Love</i> (<tt>1890</tt>, novel)<br><i>The World, the Flesh and the Devil</i> (<tt>1891</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Venetians</i> (<tt>1892</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Christmas Hirelings</i> (<tt>1894</tt>, novel)<br><i>Sons of Fire</i> (<tt>1895</tt>, novel)<br><i>London Pride</i> (<tt>1896</tt>, novel)<br><i>Rough Justice</i> (<tt>1898</tt>, novel)<br><i>His Darling Sin</i> (<tt>1899</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Infidel</i> (<tt>1900</tt>, novel)<br><i>Dead Love Has Chains</i> (<tt>1907</tt>, novel)<br><i>During Her Majesty's Pleasure</i> (<tt>1908</tt>, novel)<br><i>The Green Curtain</i> (<tt>1911</tt>, novel)<br><p> <br><br><p> <font size=-1>Do you know something we don't?</font><br> <font size=-1><a href="http://commentary.nndb.com/submit/feedback/?id=102815" rel="nofollow">Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile</a></font><br> <p> <br><br><p><font size=-1>Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications</font><p> </td></tr></table> </td></tr> </table> </td> <td width=180 align="center" valign="top" style="padding: 0px 0px 8px 25px;"></td></tr> </table> </center> </body> </html>