
A thoughtful, self‑conscious memoir invites listeners into the tangled path that shapes a writer. The narrator opens with a vivid moment in a London shop window—a cork ball bobbing in water—that drags him back to the bleak day in 1872 when he arrived in the capital penniless, hungry, and adrift. From that flash of memory springs a resolve to set his experiences down on paper, offering a candid glimpse of the raw material that later fed his imagination.
Beyond the early hardships, the work muses on the uneasy art of writing about oneself, comparing the venture to the guarded diaries of Pepys and the veiled self‑portrayals of Dickens. It balances modesty with frankness, weaving anecdotes about chance encounters, fleeting fortunes, and the everyday dramas that quietly forge a novelist’s voice. Listeners will find a lively, informal narrative that both entertains and prompts reflection on how life’s accidents can become the building blocks of literary creation.
Full title
The Making Of A Novelist An Experiment In Autobiography
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (170K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1847–1907
A Victorian novelist and journalist with a sharp eye for everyday life, he turned newsroom experience into popular fiction that mixed social observation with lively storytelling. His work ranged from journalism and novels to collaborations for the stage, making him a versatile literary figure of late 19th-century Britain.
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