Baker, William. “Reynolds vs. Dickens: Chamber’s London Journal in 1843,” ABMR, 10.1,
January 1984, pp. 14-19.
Bauch, John Alfred. Chartist Era Writings: Poverty, Paranoia and Propaganda in
Nineteenth-Century Britain. 1999, Duke University, North Carolina.
Boucher, Abigail. “‘Her Princes Within Her Are Like Wolves’: The Werewolf as a Catholic
Force in Wagner, The Wehr-Wolf“, Revenant, Issue 2, December 2016.
Boucher, Abigail. “‘Unblessed by Offspring”: Fertility and the Aristocratic Male in
Reynolds’s Mysteries of the Court of London.” Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies
9:2, Summer 2013.
Burt, Daniel S. “‘A Victorian Gothic: G.W.M. Reynolds’s The Mysteries of London.”
New York Literary Forum, vol. 7, 1980, pp. 141-158.
Carver, Stephen James. “The Wrongs and Crimes of the Poor: The Urban Underworld
of The Mysteries of London in Context.” G.W.M. Reynolds: Nineteenth-Century Fiction,
Politics and the Press, edited by Anne Humpherys and Louis James, Ashgate
Publishing, 2008, pp. 149-162.
Dalziel, Margaret. “The Most Popular Writer of Our Time.” Popular Fiction 100 Years
Ago: An Unexplored Tract of Literary History, Cohen & West, 1957, pp. 35-45.
Diamond, Michael. “The Sensation Novel.” Victorian Sensation: Or, the Spectacular, the
Shocking and the Scandalous in Nineteenth-Century Britain, Anthem Press, 2003, pp.
189-217.
Doherty, Ruth. “‘Blest’ or ‘t’othered’: Alternative Graveyards in Bleak House, Reynolds,
and Walker.” Victoriaographies 8.3, November 2018 pp. 267-289.
Doherty, Ruth. “Reading Reynolds: The Mysteries of London as ‘microscopic survery'”,
Media and Print Culture Consumption in Nineteenth-Century Britain: The Victorian
Reading Experience, edited by Paul Raphael Rooney and Anna Gasperini, Palgrave,
2016, pp.147-163.
Gough, Harold. “G.W.M. Reynolds at Herne Bay.” Bygone Kent, vol. 6, 1985, pp. 275-283.
Hackenberg, Sara. “Vampires and Resurrection Men: The Perils and Pleasures of the Embodied
Past in 1840s Sensational Fiction.” Victorian Studies 52.1, Autumn 2009, pp.63-75.
Hackenberg, Sara. “Romanticism Bites: Quixotic Historicism in Rymer and Reynolds.”
Edward Lloyd and His World, Eds. Sarah Lill and Rohan McWilliam,
New York: Routledge, 2019, pp.165-82.
Hackenberg, Sara. “Victorian ‘Mysterymania’ and #MeToo,” Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies,
Special Issue: “Victorian Literature in the Age of #MeToo”, Summer, 2020.
Hauser, Helen M. Miscellaneous Blood: G.W.M. Reynolds, Dickens, and the Anatomical
Moment. 2008, University of California, Santa Cruz, California.
Haywood, Iain. The Revolution in Popular Literature: Politics, Print and the People
1790-1860. Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Humpherys, Anne. “An Introduction to G.W.M. Reynolds’s ‘Encyclopedia of Tales.’”
G.W.M. Reynolds: Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Politics and the Press, edited by
Anne Humpherys and Louis James, Ashgate Publishing, 2008, pp. 123-133.
Humpherys, Anne. “Generic Strands and Urban Twists: The Victorian Mysteries Novel”
Victorian Studies, vol. 34, 1991, pp. 455-472.
Humpherys, Anne. “The Geometry of the Modern City: G.W.M. Reynolds and The
Mysteries of London.” Browning Institute Studies, vol. 11, 1983, pp. 69-80.
James, Louis. Fiction for the Working Man. 1963. Penguin University Books, 1974.
James, Louis. “From Egan to Reynolds: The shaping of Urban ‘Mysteries’ in England and
France, 1821-48.” European Journal of English Studies, vol. 14, no. 2, 2016, pp. 95-106.
James, Louis. “The Trouble With Betsy: Periodicals and the Common Reader in Mid-
Nineteenth-Century England.” The Victorian Periodical: Samplings and Soundings,
edited by Joanne Shattock and Michael Wolff, Leicester University Press, 1982.
James, Louis. “The View from Brick Lane: Contrasting Perspectives in Working-Class
and Middle-Class Fiction of the Early Victorian Period.” Yearbook of English
Studies, vol. 11, 1981, pp. 87-101.
John, Juliet. “Reynolds’s Mysteries and Popular Culture.” G.W.M. Reynolds:
Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Politics and the Press, edited by Anne Humpherys
and Louis James, Ashgate Publishing, 2008, pp. 163-177.
Joshi, Priya. In Another Country: Colonialism, Culture, and the English Novel in India.
Columbia University Press, 2002.
Knight, Stephen. ‘The Voice of the People’, The Mysteries of The Cities: Urban Crime Fiction
in the Nineteenth Century, McFarland, 2012, pp. 56-111.
Knight, Stephen. ‘The Man Who Outsold Dickens’, The Inventions of Charles Dickens,
edited by Gino Scatasta and Federica Zuklo, Bononia University Press, 2015,
pp. 197-208.
Knight, Stephen. The Fiction of G.W.M. Reynolds: The Man Who Outsold Dickens,
Routledge, 2019.
Léger-St-Jean, Marie. “Serialization and Story-Telling Illustrations: R.L. Stevenson
Window-Shopping for Penny Dreadfuls”, Media and Print Culture Consumption in
Ninteenth-Century Britain, edited by Paul Raphael Rooney and Anna Gasperini,
Palgrave Macmillan, 2016 pp. 111-129.
Léger-St-Jean, Marie. Reynolds Bibliography, Price One Penny: A Database of Cheap
Literature, 1837-1860. (http://priceonepenny.info).
Maxwell, Richard. “G. M. Reynolds, Dickens, and The Mysteries of
London.” Nineteenth-Century Fiction, vol. 32, no. 2, 1977, pp. 188-213.
Maxwell, Richard. Mysteries of Paris and London. University Press of Virginia, 1992.
McWilliam, Rohan. “The French Connection: G. W. M Reynolds and the Outlaw
Robert Macaire.” G.W.M. Reynolds: Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Politics and the Press,
edited by Anne Humpherys and Louis James, Ashgate Publishing, 2008, pp. 31-49.
McWilliam, Rohan. “The Mysteries of G.W.M. Reynolds: Radicalism and Melodrama in
Victorian Britain.” Living and Learning: Essays in Honour of JFC Harrison, edited by
Malcolm Chase and Ian Dyck, Scolar Press, 1996, pp. 182-98.
Nesvet, Rebecca, ed. “Science and Art, a Farce in Two Acts” by Malcolm Rymer. Scholarly
Editing: The Journal of the the Association for Documentary Editing, 38, 2017.
Nesvet, Rebecca. “The Bank Nun’s Tale: Financial Forgery, Gothic Imagery, and Economic
Power”, Victorian Network 8, 2018.
Nesvet, Rebecca. “Teaching Penny Bloods and Dreadfuls”, Teaching Victorian Literature in
the Twenty-First Century, edited by Jen Cadwallader and Laurence Mazzeno,
Macmillan, 2017, pp.53-68.
Nesvet, Rebecca. “Blood Relations: Sweeney Todd and the Rymbers of London.” Notes and
Queries 64, pp.112-116.
Nesvet, Rebecca. “James Malcolm Rymber”, The McFarland Companion to Victorian
Popular Fiction, edited by Kevin A. Morrison, McFarland, 2018, pp.204-206.
Pearl, Cyril. “Mr Dickens and Mr Reynolds.” Victorian Patchwork, Heinemann Publishing,
1972, pp. 67-94.
Plunkett, John. “Regicide and Reginamania: G.W.M. Reynolds and The Mysteries of
London.” Victorian Crime, Madness and Sensation, edited by Andrew Maunder and
Grace Moore, Ashgate Publishing, 2004, pp. 14-28.
Scott, Patrick. “The Satirist Satirized: Thackeray’s Snobs and William North’s Anti-
Punch,” Studies in Victorian and Modern Literature: A Tribute to John Sutherland, ed.
Baker (Madison NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson UP, 2015), pp. 193-204
Shannon, Mary L. Dickens, Reynolds and Mayhew on Wellington Street: the Print Culture
of a Victorian Street. Routledge, 2015.
Shannon, Mary L. “Spoken Word and Printed Page: GWM Reynolds and the London
Riots, 1848.” 19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century, vol 18, 2014.
Shirley, Michael. “On the wings of everlasting power”: GWM Reynolds and
Reynolds’s Newspaper, 1848-1876. 1997, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Illinois.
Trefor, Thomas. “G.W.M. Reynolds’s The Mysteries of London: An Introduction.” G.W.M.
Reynolds, The Mysteries of London, edited by Trefor Thomas, Keele University Press,
1996, pp. vii-xxiv.
Trefor, Thomas. “Rereading G. W. Reynolds’s The Mysteries of London.” Rereading
Victorian Fiction, edited by Alice Jenkins and Juliet John, St. Martin’s press, 2000, pp.
59-80.