A Terrible Temptation
Author | Charles Reade |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | London: Chapman and Hall |
Publication date | August 1871[1] |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | English 1871 ed. 3 volumes: 303, 310, 300[1] |
A Terrible Temptation: A Story of the Day is an 1871 sensation novel by Charles Reade. It first appeared serially in Cassell's Magazine in England from March 4 to August 26, 1871.[1][2][3]
Similar to 1866's Griffith Gaunt, the novel received negative reviews in the English press due to its content, which included extramartial relations and a courtesan, but this also helped increase sales of Reade's works in America. The Times told parents to keep the book away from their daughters. Reade responded by noting that stories in their paper inspired many of his works, and it was hypocritical to complain about the same type of content they use to sell papers. In subsequent correspondence, Reade noted that he had already sold over 370,000 copies of the novel in the United States, much larger than the Times circulation.[4]
A 2013 review calls the book "a sensation novel which makes Lady Audley's Secret look uneventful and The Woman in White slow-moving."[5]
References
- ^ a b c Sadleir, Michael. Excursions in Victorian Bibliography, p. 170 (2019)
- ^ (17 August 1871). A Terrible Temptation (review), The Nation, p. 107-08.
- ^ At the Circulating Library Periodical Information: Cassell's Magazine, Victorianresearch.com, Retrieved 12 March 2021
- ^ Fantina, Richard. Victorian Sensational Fiction: The Daring Work of Charles Reade, p. 32 (2010)
- ^ Austin, Finola (4 August 2013). Review: A Terrible Temptation, Charles Reade (1871), The Secret Victorianist
External links
- Terrible Temptation, full text, 1871 U.S. Harper & Bros. edition, Google Books