In the days when Britain ruled the waves and bestrode the world as its policeman and plunderer in chief it also subjugated half of its own people to second class status. Women were chattel and property. There were some exceptions based on wealth and birthright but for the overwhelming majority your lot was to fall in with the rules and do as you were told. Many did.
But whilst male society sought to place obstacles in the path to equality, it could not deny their literary talents, which many times they circumvented by using male pseudonyms. However, the soaring sales of magazines and periodicals during the Victorian Age meant they had voracious appetites for literature, whatever the sex of its gender.
Dozens of authors appeared to fill the need. Narratives had new ideas. Characters were emboldened by societal changes and the female voice taking responsibility.
The women included here are talents that dazzle. Put them up against anyone and they rise to the top. Whether they remain with an avid readership today or faded to obscurity with the passing of the times their quality remains undimmed.
1 - Women of Wonder - The Weird Stories - Volume 2 - An Introduction
2 - The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
3 - Transformation by Mary Shelley
4 - The Shadows on the Wall by Mary E Wilkins Freeman
5 - The Blue Room by Lettice Galbraith
6 - From the Dead by Edith Nesbit
7 - The Death Mask by H D Everett writing as Theo Parker
8 - The Last of Squire Ennismore by Charlotte Riddell
9 - Sylvia by Bessie Kyffin Taylor
10 - Whittington's Cat by Lady Eleanor Smith
11 - Young Magic by Helen Simpson
12 - No 5 Branch Line. The Engineer by Amelia Edwards
13 - In Dark New England Days by Sarah Orne Jewett
14 - A Wicked Voice - Part 1 by Vernon Lee
15 - A Wicked Voice - Part 2 by Vernon Lee