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Stanley Weyman


(Stanley John Weyman)
UK flag (1855 - 1928)

aka Jefferson Carter

Stanley John Weyman was an English novelist sometimes referred to as the "Prince of Romance". He was born at Ludlow, Shropshire, as the son of a solicitor. He was educated at Shrewsbury School, and at Christ Church, Oxford. He obtained his degree in modern history in 1877, and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1881. Weyman had been practicing as a barrister for eight years until, in 1889, he wrote his first novel entitled The House of the Wolf (1890). This was followed by the novels which were to make his reputation: among them are historical romances set amidst the turmoil of 16th and 17th century France. His most famous works include: A Gentleman of France (1893), Under the Red Robe (1894), The Castle Inn (1898) and The Long Night (1903). 
 

Genres: Historical Romance
 
Novels
   The House of the Wolf (1890)
   The New Rector (1891)
   The Story of Francis Cludde (1891)
   A Gentleman of France (1893)
   The Man in Black (1894)
   My Lady Rotha (1894)
   Under the Red Robe (1894)
   A Little Wizard (1895)
   The Red Cockade (1895)
   Shrewsbury (1897)
   The Castle Inn (1898)
   Sophia (1900)
   Count Hannibal (1902)
   The Long Night (1903)
   The Abbess of Vlaye (1904)
   Starvecrow Farm (1905)
   Chippinge (1906)
   The Wild Geese (1908)
   The Great House (1919)
   Madam Constantia (1919) (as by Jefferson Carter)
   Ovington's Bank (1922)
   The Traveler in the Fur Cloak (1924)
   Queens Folly (1925)
   The Lively Peggy (1927)
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Collections
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Novellas and Short Stories
   The Fowl in the Pot (1902)
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