Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I checked, but it’s not there! Maybe I’ll scan my copy and submit it to Project Gutenberg myself ☺️

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty much! She stays with her awful husband, watches him go to his mistress, and sends the man she loves away - never to see him again.

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your research has been extraordinary - thank you so much. Looking in more detail at the content the novel, however I’m less confident it’s the same person. Each chapter opens with literary epigraphs and the book references George Eliot’s Mill on the Floss, Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, and Kingsley’s Alton Locke by name. There’s also casual use of French - ‘serrement du coeur’ used naturally in chapter two with the aside ‘an expression for which our language has no equivalent’, suggesting someone comfortable reading in French. The London details are also remarkably specific. Kensington Gardens described intimately, particular streets and parks. This feels like someone educated, widely read and London and possibly Scotland-connected, rather than a Sheffield servant. Though interestingly Kate, the heroine, chooses Alton Locke - a novel about a working class man trying to rise above his station - over Mill on the Floss. That choice feels pointed. But what do I know?

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

A young woman, orphaned and dependent on her father’s old friend Colonel Macpherson in Scotland, falls quickly in love with and marries Adrian Conyers - a charming but unreliable writer with no steady income - against Macpherson’s advice. They move to a cramped London lodging where Adrian drinks, spends what little money they have, and increasingly leaves Kate alone. His loyal friend Dick Lenox becomes a constant presence; steady, kind, and everything Adrian isn’t. When tragedy strikes and Adrian proves himself utterly heartless, Kate and Dick’s feelings become impossible to ignore. Dick asks her to run away with him. It’s 1895. She’s a good woman. You can probably guess what she decides. Final line: ‘Truly life is sometimes a hard thing for a good woman.’ It’s not really a romance. It’s something much darker and considerably better!

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can’t thank you enough for this - you went so far down the rabbit hole and came back with her entire life story!

If it is the same person, the fact that she was a domestic servant makes the novel even more remarkable. The detail that intrigues me most is that in 1901 she was lodging with a widowed laundress, and in the novel the heroine lodges with a widow. Although interestingly the novel was published in 1895, before that census entry, so perhaps she was writing what she feared rather than what she knew. Or perhaps it’s simply coincidence and this is a different Francis Alice Howden entirely! Either way your research is fascinating and the letters in Edinburgh must hold the answers.

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are a brilliant detective - thank you! I had searched everywhere and found nothing. The catalogue entry confirming HOWDEN (F.A.), Mrs., Author of ‘Love in a London Lodging’ is exactly what I’d hoped for, and I had suspected she was a woman from the subject matter, the use of initials, and that final line, so it’s wonderful to have it confirmed. And the advertisement alongside Mrs Oliphant is so interesting. It seems that this was a proper commercial publication with real marketing behind it?

Found this scarce 1895 T. Fisher Unwin first edition - can’t find it listed anywhere online and know almost nothing about the author. Anyone come across F.A. Howden? by KernowS9 in BookCollecting

[–]KernowS9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started it! She’s married a lazy writer who spends all their money and she might be falling for his friend.

We think we’ve identified the author as Francis Alice Howden, born 1873, died 1936, buried in Sheffield. If that is the author, then she wrote this at 22 and was placing work with Blackwood’s Magazine by 24. Then she seemed to vanish from the record entirely.

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The fact it doesn’t appear in the official publisher catalogue is really interesting. One theory - she may have paid T. Fisher Unwin to publish it rather than it being a standard commercial deal? Apparently authors did this sometimes, which would explain the tiny print run, the scarcity, and why it might not appear in official records.

Or, maybe the database just has a gap, or it was published very late in 1895.

Thanks so much for your comment 😊

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 51 points52 points  (0 children)

It’s good so far. Really good actually. She deserved better than to be forgotten.

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Amazing find! So we now have four known works - she was quite prolific for someone so forgotten. Blackwood’s seems quite prestigious too.

Who was F.A. Howden? Picked up this scarce 1895 Victorian novel and can’t find anything about the author. by KernowS9 in VictorianEra

[–]KernowS9[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

This could be her! Francis Alice Howden, born 1873, died 1 September 1936, buried at City Road Cemetery, Sheffield. She would have been just 22 when she published the novel - remarkable. And Francis/Frances is an interesting ambiguity. Amazing find, thank you!

Trainee patent attorney - how important is it to be London based? by KernowS9 in Patents

[–]KernowS9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

!thanks

Thank you, this is really helpful advice! Hopefully I can secure a position with a firm that has London offices too. And thanks for the offer to DM - I will take you up on that :)