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George Manville Fenn (1831–1909)

Author of Young Robin Hood

157+ Works 493 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Works by George Manville Fenn

Young Robin Hood (2004) 25 copies, 2 reviews
The dark house (2008) 10 copies
The Black Bar (2008) 9 copies
!Tention (2007) 8 copies, 1 review
Middy and Ensign (2008) 7 copies
The Mynns' Mystery (2011) 7 copies
A Dash from Diamond City (2016) 7 copies
In the Mahdi's grasp (2015) 6 copies
THE LITTLE SKIPPER (1900) 6 copies
Menhardoc (2007) 6 copies
The Bag of Diamonds (2015) 6 copies
Diamond Dyke (2008) 5 copies
The Powder Monkey (2013) 5 copies
Burr Junior (2007) 5 copies
Cutlass and Cudgel (2013) 5 copies
One Maid's Mischief (2011) 4 copies
Our Soldier Boy (2007) 4 copies
Cursed by a Fortune (2010) 4 copies
By birth a lady (2015) 4 copies
The new mistress [by G.M. Fenn] (2015) 3 copies, 1 review
A Fluttered Dovecote (2011) 3 copies
The Sapphire Cross (2015) 3 copies
The Kopje Garrison (2013) 3 copies
Blind policy (2015) 3 copies
Steve Young (2007) 3 copies
Sweet Mace (2015) 3 copies
The New Forest Spy (2009) 3 copies
Seven Frozen Sailors (2015) 3 copies
The tiger lily (2015) 3 copies
Cormorant Crag, etc (2007) 3 copies
King of the Castle (2013) 3 copies
Fitz the Filibuster (2007) 3 copies
The Peril Finders (2009) 3 copies
To The West (2007) 3 copies
Witness to the deed (2009) 3 copies
The Star-Gazers (2015) 3 copies
The Rosery Folk (2011) 2 copies
Double cunning (2011) 2 copies
Charge! (2015) 2 copies
The white virgin (2011) 2 copies
Mad (2013) 2 copies
Midnight webs (2013) 2 copies
The man with a shadow (2011) 2 copies
A double knot (2011) 2 copies
This man's wife (2012) 2 copies
A Life's Eclipse. A novel (2012) 2 copies
Old Gold (2010) 2 copies
The parson o' Dumford (2011) 2 copies
A crimson crime 2 copies
A Terrible Coward (2012) 2 copies
Trapped By Malays (2012) 2 copies
A Young Hero (2009) 2 copies
Steady & strong stories told by (1905) — Contributor — 2 copies
A little world (2011) 2 copies
The vicar's people (2011) 2 copies
Lady Maude's mania (2011) 2 copies
Sir Hilton's sin (2011) 2 copies
Eli's children (2011) 2 copies
Commodore Junk (1889) 2 copies
Nurse Elisia (2013) 2 copies
Friends I Have Made (2013) 1 copy
The King's Sons (2012) 1 copy
Eli's Children (2015) 1 copy
Devon Boys (2007) 1 copy
The Khedive's Country (2011) 1 copy
The Rajah of Dah (2012) 1 copy
Of high descent (2013) 1 copy
Mahme Nousie 1 copy
Will of the Mill (2007) 1 copy
Bunyip land (2007) 1 copy
Son Philip (2007) 1 copy
Sail Ho! A Boy at Sea (2007) 1 copy
Pretty Polly 1 copy
High play 1 copy

Associated Works

Victorian Nightmares (1977) — Contributor — 168 copies, 3 reviews
Chillers for Christmas (1989) — Contributor — 49 copies
Shivers for Christmas (1995) — Contributor — 29 copies
The Fate of Fenella (1892) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories: Volume 4 (2019) — Contributor — 7 copies
Venture and Valour (Rare Collector's Series) (1900) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Fenn, George Manville
Birthdate
1831-01-03
Date of death
1909-08-26
Gender
male
Education
Battersea Training College for Teachers
Occupations
teacher (Lincolnshire)
editor (Cassell's Magazine)
Relationships
Leake, Susanna (wife)
Short biography
Fenn, the third child and eldest son of a butler, Charles Fenn, was largely self-educated, teaching himself French, German and Italian. After studying at Battersea Training College for Teachers (1851-4), he became the master of a national school at Alford, Lincolnshire. He later became a printer, editor and publisher of short-lived periodicals, before attracting the attention of Charles Dickens and others with a sketch for All the Year Round in 1864. He contributed to Chambers's Journal and Once a Week. In 1866, he wrote a series of articles on working-class life for the newspaper The Star. These were collected and republished in four volumes. They were followed by a similar series in the Weekly Times.
Meanwhile he was married in 1855 to Susanna Leak, daughter of John Leak of Alford. They had two sons and six daughters.
Fenn's first story for boys, Hollowdell Grange, appeared in 1867. It was followed by a long list of other novels for juveniles and adults. Having become editor of Cassell's Magazine in 1870, he purchased Once a Week and edited it until it closed in 1879. He also wrote for the theatre.
Fenn and his family lived at Syon Lodge, Isleworth, Middlesex, where he built up a library of 25,000 volumes and took up telescope making. His last book was a biography of a great fellow writer of boys' stories, George Alfred Henty. He died at home on 26 August 1909.
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Pimlico, London, England, UK
Place of death
Isleworth, London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
London, England, UK

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
http://nhw.livejournal.com/469273.html

It's pretty formulaic. You know what's going to happen from the very first chapter, where we are introduced to our two youthful protagonists, their feuding aristocratic fathers, and their demure and beautiful sisters (their mothers both being strangely absent), and the intruding band of ruffians who will unite the two families in common struggle despite generations of enmity. Despite a supposed setting in the reign of James I, it was much more show more reminiscent of Richard Jeffries' firmly 19th-century Bevis.

I was on the lookout for homoerotic subtexts and well, yes, they are there aplenty. Most notably, the one point of plot resolution that genuinely surprised me is that, rather than either or both of the young heroes becoming romantically involved with the other's sister, as I had expected, the book ends with them heading out into the wild countryside for a friendly bit of close physical combat.

There are some nice bits of description of the flora and fauna of the Peak District, in between manly deeds of virtue and valour, and a couple of interesting minor characters (much more interesting than the two heroes, who are practically interchangeable): the local sage/doctor/college graduate and an underestimated miner's child. The whole thing can be found on-line here.

There are also some glorious blurbs for other books from the same publisher, suitable for presentation as prizes (our copy was presented to my great-uncle Maurice, for "good behaviour", in 1899).
show less
Part adventury story for young adults, part Bildungsroman, part comic novel. Full of Victorian stereotypes concerning the Scottish Highlands and their people, but presented in such a tongue-in-cheek manner that one can't but conclude that the author was fully aware they were mere stereotypes, and expected the reader to perceive them as such as well.
A playful short novel in which the Sheriff of Nottingham's son becomes by accident a child member of Robin Hood's Merry Men. Good enough to kill time with (and then forget).
Despite what the synopsis says, this isn't a book about a young Robin Hood, instead it's a story about a boy called Robin who lives with Robin Hood for a time. It was an interesting little story, though not particularly believable.

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Statistics

Works
157
Also by
11
Members
493
Popularity
#50,126
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
7
ISBNs
440
Languages
1

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