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There are 5 biographies on Wilkie Collins.


summary from source:

(William) Wilkie Collins Biography
8,526 words, approx. 28 pages
 "Make 'em cry, make 'em laugh, make 'em wait." This adage of Wilkie Collins epitomizes his success as the leading sensation novelist of Victorian England. Combining expert plotting with carefully described settings, Collins's novels define the...
summary from source:

William Wilkie Collins Biography
8,478 words, approx. 28 pages
 Although best known to modern readers as the author of The Woman in White (1860) and The Moonstone (1868)—which T. S. Eliot and Dorothy Sayers have called the best English detective story—Wilkie Collins made contributions more substantial...
summary from source:

(William) Wilkie Collins Biography
7,933 words, approx. 26 pages
 Although best known to modern readers as the author of The Woman in White (1860) and The Moonstone (1868)--which T. S. Eliot and Dorothy Sayers have called the best English detective story--Wilkie Collins made contributions more substantial than his...
summary from source:

(William) Wilkie Collins Biography
7,824 words, approx. 26 pages
 Victorian fiction writer, essayist, and social commentator Wilkie Collins continues to perplex critics and entertain readers. Critics, pointing to his stereotyped characters, melodramatic plots, sometimes unsophisticated approaches to social issues,...
summary from source:

William Wilkie Collins Biography
434 words, approx. 1 pages
 The English author William Wilkie Collins (1824-1889) wrote intricately plotted novels of sensational intrigue which helped establish the conventions of modern detective fiction. Wilkie Collins was born in London on Jan. 8, 1824, the son of a...

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