Charlotte Riddell – Dublin 2019 https://dublin2019.com An Irish Worldcon Wed, 20 Mar 2019 19:53:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://dublin2019.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/cropped-harp_logo_sm-e1502041914202-59x59.png Charlotte Riddell – Dublin 2019 https://dublin2019.com 32 32 Fantastic Fridays: Charlotte Riddell https://dublin2019.com/fantastic-fridays-charlotte-riddell/ Fri, 05 Apr 2019 12:00:56 +0000 https://dublin2019.com/?p=7536 Welcome to a new series on Irish writers of the fantastic. Over the next few months Swan River Press will be taking us on a tour through Ireland’s fantasy heritage. “The terror of it instead of unchaining my voice laid an icy hand upon my mouth and kept me still and silent.” – “The De […]

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Welcome to a new series on Irish writers of the fantastic. Over the next few months Swan River Press will be taking us on a tour through Ireland’s fantasy heritage.

Charlotte Riddell
“The terror of it instead of unchaining my voice laid an icy hand upon my mouth and kept me still and silent.”

“The De Grabrooke Monument” (1879)

Charlotte Riddell (1832-1906) was born Charlotte Eliza Lawson Cowan in Carrickfergus, Co. Antrim on 30 September 1832. She moved to London in 1855 where she started her career as a writer. There, in 1857, she married engineer and inventor Hadley Riddell. By 1867 she was the editor and co-proprietor of the St. James’s Magazine (previously edited by Anna Maria Hall). From 1857 until 1902, Riddell published more than thirty volumes, mostly novels but also short story collections. Although her realist fiction was popular during her lifetime, today she is primarily remembered for her ghost stories. She wrote five supernatural novellas, including The Uninhabited House (1875) and The Haunted River (1877), and her collection Weird Stories (1882) is now considered a classic of the genre. Riddell’s husband died in 1881, and in 1886 she left London for nearby Middlesex. Suffering from ill health and financial difficulties, she was awarded a Society of Authors pension in 1901. Riddell died on 24 September 1906 and is buried in St. Leonard’s Churchyard, Heston.

 

Read Charlotte Riddell at Project Gutenberg:

The Uninhabited House

Mortomley’s Estate

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