Y/M/D | Association | Description | Place | Locale | Food | Event | |
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1789/05/18 | The Marquise de Douhault, owner of Chateau de Chazelet, dies in Orleans after having smoked tobacco. The mysterious affair of the Marquise de Douhault may have inspired Wilkie Collins in writing "The Woman In White". | Chateau de Chazelet | Chazelet | ||||
1859/11/26 | Wilkie Collins | Author | "The Woman in White" is serialized in "All the Year Round" weekly literary magazine, 26 November 1859 to 25 August 1860. Charles Dickens had asked friend Wilkie Collins to write a novel for his new magazine, Dickens wrote "A Tale of Two Cities". | ||||
1859/11/26 | All the Year Round | Publisher | "The Woman in White" is serialized in "All the Year Round" weekly literary magazine, 26 November 1859 to 25 August 1860. Charles Dickens had asked friend Wilkie Collins to write a novel for his new magazine, Dickens wrote "A Tale of Two Cities". | ||||
1860/00/00 | S Low, Son and Co | Publisher | "The Woman in White" is published in book form by S Low, Son and Co, London. |
Particulars for The Woman in White: | |||
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Art Type | Book | a written or printed work consisting of pages glued or sewn together along one side and bound in covers. | |
Narrative Arts | Fiction | prose literature, especially short stories and novels, that describes imaginary events and people | |
Narrative Arts | Mystery | something not understood or beyond understanding | |
Narrative Arts | Narrative | an account of connected events | |
Art Type | Novel | long form fiction narrative that is at least 40,000 words in length | |
Narrative Arts | Prose | ordinary written language |
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