Books Fatal to Their Authors

audiobook

Books Fatal to Their Authors

by P. H. (Peter Hampson) Ditchfield

EN·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

The book opens with a sharp‑tongued warning to every writer who dares to let imagination outrun convention. It sketches a bleak landscape where fame and fortune are as fleeting as a candle’s flame, and where the very pages a poet pours his soul into can become the instrument of his undoing. Through a blend of irony and solemn respect, the author invites listeners to consider how critics, censors, and public opinion have turned literary ambition into a mortal risk.

From medieval dungeons to the gallows of Enlightenment Europe, the work recounts real and imagined stories of men whose treatises on everything from trigonometry to insects earned them exile, torture, or fire. Satirical voices are singled out as especially dangerous, their wit provoking the wrath of authorities who could not tolerate dissent. The narrative balances scholarly detail with a wry tone, making the tragic fate of these “books fatal to their authors” both a cautionary tale and a tribute to the stubborn spirit of those who write against the tide.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (289K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Text file produced by Anne Soulard, Eric Eldred and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team The HTML file produced by David Widger

Release date

2005-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

PH

P. H. (Peter Hampson) Ditchfield

1854–1930

Drawn to old churches, village traditions, and the stories hidden in ordinary places, this English clergyman wrote warmly and widely about the past. His books helped make local history feel lively, approachable, and full of character.

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