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Ravenshoe

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About This Book

The novel traces the fortunes of an old landed family through gossip, rivalries, legal disputes, and shifting loyalties, related by a genial but indiscreet narrator who collects the household story. It moves between domestic comedy and public calamity: university scandals, romantic entanglements, shipwrecks and emigration, military service, financial ruin and slow recovery, and repeated family confrontations over inheritance and honor. Episodes of social observation and satire alternate with melodramatic reversals, secret revelations, and daring escapes, and the narrative closes as fractures are healed and the family’s standing and property are finally reconstituted amid changed circumstances.

About the Author

Kingsley, Henry portrait

Henry Kingsley

Henry Kingsley was an English novelist and a prominent figure in Victorian literature, known for his vivid storytelling and character development. He is best recognized for his novel "Ravenshoe," which explores themes of family, loyalty, and the complexities of social class. Kingsley's works often reflect his experiences and observations of life in 19th-century England, blending adventure with moral inquiry. In addition to "Ravenshoe," he wrote notable works such as "The Lost Child" and "The Recollections of Geoffrey Hamlyn," which further showcase his literary talent and depth of insight into human nature.

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