Anne Manning (novelist) explained

Anne Manning (17 February 1807  - 14 September 1879) was an English novelist. Born in London, she was an active writer, having 51 works to her credit. Though her writings were antiquated in style, they were considered to have some literary charm and a delicate historical imagination. Her best known novel features the young wife of the poet John Milton.

Background and life

Manning initially produced two books of non-fiction, followed by her first fictional work, Village Belles (first published in 1833, though some modern sources mistakenly say 1838). Her best known works were initially printed as serials in Sharpe's Magazine and later published in book form. She is best known for The Maiden and Married Life of Mary Powell, afterwards Mistress Milton, which first appeared anonymously in 1849 and was later just referred to as Mary Powell. It is derived from the story of the young wife of John Milton. She is also known for The Household of Sir Thomas More, a picture of More's home life in the form of a diary written by his daughter Margaret.

Mary Powell was so popular that her subsequent works simply identified Manning as "The Author of Mary Powell," otherwise remaining anonymous.[1] [2] A number of sources subsequently attributed the pseudonym of "Mary Powell" to Hannah Mary Rathbone, whose The Diary of Lady Willoughby (1844) was similar in style to Manning, and erroneously suggested that Manning had at some point married and become Mrs. Rathbone.[1] [3] Manning and Rathbone both released a number of works which used Caslon Old Face font, to add a visual element to the notion that their works were actual diaries of long ago persons.[4] [5]

Manning never married, and was considered a chronic invalid, living for many years at Reigate Hill in Surrey until her mother died, and then at a sister's house near Tunbridge Wells, where she died in 1879.[6]

Although inexpensive reprints of Mary Powell and The Household of Sir Thomas More were published into the 1930s, Manning's archaic style has long since fallen out of favor.[7]

Selected bibliography

Manning wrote over 50 books.[8] [9] They include:

Notes and References

  1. Room, Adrian Dictionary of Pseudonyms, p. 387 (5th ed. 2010)
  2. (14 February 1880). Memoriam: Anne Manning, Author of "Mary Powell", by the author of "Moravian Life in the Black Forest", Englishwoman's Review
  3. (October 1901). Anne Manning - A Query, Library Journal, p. 730.
  4. Hasell, Duncan Ingraham. Material Fictions: Readers and Texuality in the British Novel, 1814--1852, pp. 177–178 (2009 Ph.D. dissertation).
  5. Simmons, James. C. Thackeray's Esmond and Anne Manning's "Spurious Antiques", in The Victorian Newsletter, Fall 1972, No. 42, pp. 22–24.
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=5vBrAAAAIAAJ&pg=211 Women Novelists of Queen Victoria's Reign
  7. Mitchell, Sally, ed. Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia, p. 476 (1988, Routledge 2011)
  8. Sutherland, John. The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction, p. 411
  9. https://books.google.com/books?id=9ZwzAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA155 The World's Greatest Books, Volume 6
  10. (20 November 1852). The Colloquies of Edward Osborne (review), The Spectator, p. 17
  11. Bateson, F. W., ed. The Cambridge bibliography of English literature, Vol. III 1800-1900, p. 495 (1969 ed.).