Charles Gibbon

British novelist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish novelist
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasNovelist
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1843
Death1 January 1890Great Yarmouth (aged 47 years)
The details

Biography

Charles Gibbon (1843–1890) was a British novelist.

Life

Gibbon was born in the Isle of Man, and moved with his parents to Glasgow at an early age. After receiving elementary education there, he became a clerk, and then before age 17 found a position on a local newspaper. During Charles Kean's visit to Glasgow in 1860, Gibbon wrote an account of his acting, and Kean made his acquaintance. A year or so later Gibbon moved to London.

Ill-health compelled Gibbon to spend his later years on the east coast of England, and he died at Great Yarmouth on 15 August 1890. He was married and left a family.

Works

A three-volume novel Dangerous Connexions was published by Gibbon in 1864, which had a second edition in 1875. The Dead Heart followed in 1865, and Gibbon went on to publish some thirty novels, including were Robin Gray (1869; other editions 1872 and 1877) and For Lack of Gold (1871; other editions 1873 and 1877). Gibbon's Scottish novels have been compared with those of William Black. Ten novels featured "Detective Dier", a character based on Edmund Reid, who was a friend of Gibbon's.

Gibbon also edited The Casquet of Literature (6 vols. 1873-4), and wrote a Life (2 vols. 1878) of George Combe, in whose theories he was interested.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.