The other day I was reading a historical romance set in the Victorian era, and one of the characters was reading
The Mill on the Floss, by George Eliot. After I checked to make sure the book had actually been published by the time the book was set (because I do that sort of thing), it got me thinking about books in fiction. In historical romance, female characters do a lot of reading, presumably because most of them come from the upper classes and they don't have much else to do.
In fact, however, portraying readers in Victorian fiction is historically accurate: a lot of people, in every class, did a lot of reading. According to the
British Library, almost 60,000 works of fiction were published during the Victorian period. These included novels, "
yellowbacks" , and "
penny dreadfuls." The British public, particularly women, were also voracious readers of
magazines, 125,000 different titles of which were published during the 19th century.
In the early days of the period, novels were either published in serial form in magazines--many of Dickens' works first appeared this way--or in three volume sets. After that, the books were published in a single 6-shilling volume, then, sometimes, as a yellowback. Books could be obtained at bookshops, railway station book stalls, and
circulating libraries.
|
Sense and Sensibility, 1870 |
Yellowbacks were precursors to today's mass-market paperbacks, published
in cheap bindings with a characteristic yellow cover, sold in railway
station book stalls. They included such beloved classics as Austen's
Sense and Sensibility and Mrs. Gaskell's
Ruth, as well some rather less well-known works, such as
Nora's Love Test: A Novel and
Matrimonial Shipwrecks, or, Mere Human Nature.
Emory University has digitized over 1,200 of these gems, which can be
downloaded for free, thus ensuring that I will probably get nothing else
done this weekend. There is an interesting blog featuring just about everything you'd ever want to know about yellowbacks at
http://yellowbacks.wordpress.com/.
|
Varney the Vampire,1847. |
Penny dreadfuls were cheaply made works of serial fiction, intended
for the working classes. They were often violent and bloody, meant to titillate and hook the reader. Titles
included such marvels as
Varney the Vampire, or, The Feast of Blood. A Romance, which was published in 109 installments. The tale of Sweeney Todd
started life as a penny dreadful entitled, oddly,
The String of Pearls.
There is great blog post on penny dreadfuls at
http://vichist.blogspot.com/2008/11/penny-dreadfuls.html, featuring a marvelous defense of the form by G.K. Chesterton, who declared that any “literature that represents our life as dangerous and startling is truer than any literature that represents it as dubious and languid. For life is a fight and is not a conversation.”