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  1. Ann Radcliffe was born Ann Ward on July 9, 1764, in Holborn, a borough of central London, the only child of William Ward and Ann Oates Ward. Her father was a successful haberdasher who provided ...

  2. Ann Radcliffe’s fame as a novelist in modern times in no way compares to the popularity she enjoyed in the 1790’s. With the publication of her third novel, The Romance of the Forest, this ...

  3. Ann (Ward) Radcliffe 1764-1823 (Born Ann Ward) English novelist, poet, and journalist. For further information on Radcliffe's works and career, see .

  4. Summary. After the death of his wife, Monsieur St. Aubert, a French aristocrat, takes his daughter on a trip in the Pyrenees. High on a mountain road, the St. Auberts meet a young nobleman dressed ...

  5. Ann Radcliffe Long Fiction Analysis. The novels of Ann Radcliffe serve as a transition between the major English novelists of the eighteenth century and the first accomplished novelists of the ...

  6. "Ann Radcliffe - Ann Radcliffe Mystery & Detective Fiction Analysis." Masterpieces of Fiction, Detective and Mystery Edition, edited by Carl Rollyson, ...

  7. "Ann Radcliffe - Principal Works." Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism, edited by Denise Kasinec and Mary L. Onorato, Vol. 55. Gale Cengage, 1997 ...

  8. Aug 12, 2024 · Ann Radcliffe was considered the foremost exponent of the former Gothic mode, as M. G. Lewis was of the latter. Rhoda L. Flaxman on Radcliffe as a "word-painter":

  9. Sep 5, 2023 · When Ann Radcliffe (née Ward) began publishing at the end of the 18th century, the novel was just becoming established as a standard genre. What would become known as the Gothic novel was ...

  10. "Ann Radcliffe and the Extended Imagination." Contemporary Review 258, No. 1505 (June 1991): 300-8. Briefly reviews the plot, main characters, and style of The Mysteries of Udolpho and The Italian.