(I've decided to start indicating which books come from where.)
- Michel Faber, The Apple: New Crimson Petal Stories (Canongate, 2007). Neo-Victorian short story collection that spins off from Faber's The Crimson Petal and the White. (Amazon [secondhand])
- Mary Swan, The Boys in the Trees: A Novel (Holt, 2008). Historical novel-cum-mystery set in turn-of-the-century England and Canada. (Amazon [secondhand])
- Sam Taylor, The Amnesiac (Faber & Faber, 2007). Man has amnesia, finds interesting but ominous manuscript. (Amazon [secondhand])
- John Harvey, Victorian Novelists and Their Illustrators (NYU, 1971). The art of Victorian illustration--Cruikshank, Phiz, etc. (eBay)
- Melissa Fegan, Literature and the Irish Famine 1845-1919 (OUP, 2002). "Famine literature" as a genre. (Oxford)
- Simon Joyce, The Victorians in the Rearview Mirror (Ohio, 2007). Study of the political and cultural apppropriations of "the Victorians." (Scholar's Choice at the 2008 NeMLA)
- Joe D. Burchfield, Lord Kelvin and the Age of the Earth (Chicago, 1990). Kelvin's interventions in geological disputes. (eBay)
- Gordon Rupp, Religion in England, 1688-1791 (OUP, 1987). Standard ecclesiastical history. (Oxford)
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