
A lively, if chaotic, family reunion sets the stage as the Caxton clan gathers around their narrator, each eager to steer the fate of the characters they adore—or despise. Mothers, fathers, captains, and eccentric relatives volley opinions about lovers, villains, and tragic heroines, invoking literary precedents and even the absurd science of phrenology to justify their theories. Their frantic debate turns the scene into a theatrical chorus, blurring the line between audience and author.
Amid the clamor, a calm, almost iron‑willed narrator—Pisitratus—asserts that once a character awakens, it escapes the writer’s control, bound instead to its own inevitable destiny. This meta‑dialogue mixes humor with a sly critique of Victorian melodrama, exploring how personalities, society, and unseen forces shape outcomes. Listeners will be drawn into a witty, self‑aware tale that questions who truly holds the pen: the creator, the characters, or the unseen currents of fate.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (583K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1803–1873
Best remembered for vivid historical and supernatural fiction, this prolific Victorian writer also left a surprising mark on everyday language with phrases that people still quote today. His stories mix drama, mystery, politics, and the occult in a way that helped shape popular fiction in the 19th century.
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