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- The_Mysteries_of_London abstract "The Mysteries of London is a penny dreadful or city mysteries novel begun by George W. M. Reynolds in 1844. Reynolds wrote the first two series of this long-running narrative of life in the seedy underbelly of mid-nineteenth-century London. Thomas Miller wrote the third series and Edward L. Blanchard wrote the fourth series of this immensely popular title.Michael Angelo in Penny Dreadfuls and Other Victorian Horrors writes:Reynolds had read Eugene Sue while in Paris and was particularly impressed by his novel Les Mystères de Paris (The Mysteries of Paris). It inspired Reynolds to write and publish a penny part serial The Mysteries of London (1845), in which he paralleled Sue's tale of vice, depravity, and squalor in the Parisian slums with a sociological story contrasting the vice and degradation of London working-class life with the luxury and debaucheries of the hedonistic upper crust. An early socialist and a Chartist sympathizer, Reynolds had a genuine social conscience, and he contrived to stitch into the pages of his books diatribes against social evils and class inequities. (79)Instalments were published weekly and contained a single illustration and eight pages of text printed in double columns. The weekly numbers were later bound in cloth covers with a fresh title page and table of contents and offered as complete works of fiction.After Reynolds quit The Mysteries of London, he began a new title: The Mysteries of the Court of London, which ran from 1848 until 1856.".
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- The_Mysteries_of_London wikiPageRevisionID "602837154".
- The_Mysteries_of_London hasPhotoCollection The_Mysteries_of_London.
- The_Mysteries_of_London subject Category:1840s_books.
- The_Mysteries_of_London subject Category:Penny_dreadfuls.
- The_Mysteries_of_London subject Category:Pulp_stories.
- The_Mysteries_of_London subject Category:City_mysteries.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Abstraction100002137.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Attribute100024264.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type CityMysteries.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type CognitiveState105669934.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Communication100033020.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Condition113920835.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Confusion105683582.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type DimeNovel106368321.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Fiction106367107.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type LiteraryComposition106364329.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Message106598915.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Mystery105685538.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Narrative107221094.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Novel106367879.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type PennyDreadfuls.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Perplexity105685363.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type PsychologicalState114373582.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type PulpStories.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type State100024720.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type Writing106362953.
- The_Mysteries_of_London type WrittenCommunication106349220.
- The_Mysteries_of_London comment "The Mysteries of London is a penny dreadful or city mysteries novel begun by George W. M. Reynolds in 1844. Reynolds wrote the first two series of this long-running narrative of life in the seedy underbelly of mid-nineteenth-century London. Thomas Miller wrote the third series and Edward L.".
- The_Mysteries_of_London label "The Mysteries of London".
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- The_Mysteries_of_London sameAs The_Mysteries_of_London.
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- The_Mysteries_of_London isPrimaryTopicOf The_Mysteries_of_London.