286. Mary Elizabeth Braddon — Lady Audley's Secret with Kristine Huntley

Pass the smelling salts! Readers of the Victorian Era eagerly (or furtively) set scruples aside to read Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s 1862 sensation novel Lady Audley’s Secret — the title of which was enough to tempt even the most puritanical schoolmarm into sneaking a peak. But it was Braddon’s sumptuous prose, eye for drama and sophisticated understanding of social mores which won her the admiration of contemporaries like William Makepiece Thackery, Alfred Lord Tennyson and Robert Louis Stevenson. Booklistreviewer and television writer Kristine Huntley joins us this week to discuss Braddon’s remarkable prowess in navigating scandalous secrets … including her own!

Mentioned in this episode:

2026 Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction shortlist and longlist

Booklist

Lady Audley’s Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

“Abducted by my Teacher” Lifetime movie

“Freakish” on Hulu

“Mind Games” on ABC

“Two Sentence Horror Stories” on the CW

The real case that partially inspired Lady Audley’s Secret

John Maxwell

Aurora Floyd by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins

The Doctor’s Wife by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

The Trail of the Serpent by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Three Times Dead by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Daniel Deronda by George Eliot

Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 268 on Rosalind Ashe

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