| Dimensions | 15 × 21 × 4 cm |
|---|---|
| Language |
Navy cloth binding with gilt title and on the spine. Grey and green art deco style decoration on the spine and both boards.
F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.
This is a beautifully bound book, scarce & worthy of any library.
After Dark is a collection of six short stories by Wilkie Collins, first published in 1856. It was the author’s first collection of short stories. Five of the stories were previously published in Household Words, a magazine edited by Charles Dickens.
William Wilkie Collins (8 January 1824 – 23 September 1889) was an English novelist and playwright known especially for The Woman in White (1859), a mystery novel and early “sensation novel”, and for The Moonstone (1868), which, after Poe’s story, Murders in the Rue Morgue, has been proposed as the first modern English detective novel.
Born to the London painter William Collins and his wife, Harriet Geddes, he moved with them to Italy when he was twelve, living there and in France for two years, learning both Italian and French. He worked initially as a tea merchant. After Antonina, his first novel, appeared in 1850, Collins met Charles Dickens, who became a friend and mentor. Some of his work appeared in Dickens’s journals Household Words and All the Year Round. They also collaborated on drama and fiction. Collins gained financial stability and an international following by the 1860s, but became addicted to the opium he took for his gout, so that his health and writing quality declined in the 1870s and 1880s.
Collins criticised the institution of marriage: he split his time between widow Caroline Graves – living with her for most of his life, treating her daughter as his – and the younger Martha Rudd, by whom he had three children.

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