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Florence Marryat (1833-1899) was an actress and an author of close to seventy novels, several short story collections, plays, newspaper articles, and works of nonfiction. Scholars believe with reasonable certainty that Marryat was born in 1833, but like many Victorian women writers who were not appreciated during their lifetime, some of her history cannot be confirmed. The daughter of the famous maritime novelist Captain Frederick Marryat, she wrote works of "sensation fiction," a genre of her time akin to thrillers. Publishing her first novel, Love's Conflict, in 1865, the English writer's works were widely popular and often explored social topics considered taboo during her lifetime, such as domestic abuse, feminism, racism, and sexuality.
Rachel Stewart (introduction) is a graduate teaching associate at Ohio State University studying Victorian popular fiction and culture, specializing in horror, the Gothic, and vampires. Stewart is actively engaged in the recovery of work by overlooked female Victorian authors of popular fiction, including Florence Marryat and has worked extensively with Marryat's archives of work.
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