![]() The early years of Edwardian era were peaceful and relatively uncomplicated, though political unrest was simmering below the surface of the “golden age” in the years before the First World War broke out in 1914. The Edwardian era-the period of King Edward’s brief reign from 1901-1910 in the wake of Queen Victoria’s death-would have been in full swing during the events of The Woman in Black. Drablow and her sister Jennet’s existence. This intersection of the “modern” and the antiquated provides the novel with a good deal of tension, and highlights the deeply isolated nature of Mrs. Arthur brings a torch light to Eel Marsh House, but when it breaks, there are only candles left to light his way. Samuel Daily, are in possession of automobiles, horses and carriages, it seems that full modernization has not yet come to the countryside. ![]() ![]() Her hometown was later referred to in her novel A Change for the Better (1969) and some short stories especially 'Cockles and Mussels'. The Woman in Black, Susan Hills story-within-a-story, follows English lawyer Arthur Kipps as he confronts a paranormal experience from his younger days. Though some characters, such as the wealthy Mr. Susan Hill was born in Scarborough, North Yorkshire in 1942. ![]() ![]() Though Susan Hill intentionally never provides readers with a firm date for the events contained within the pages of The Woman in Black, it seems likely that the frame story is set roughly in the 1920s, with the main action (the young Arthur Kipps’s journey to Crythin Gifford and Eel Marsh House) transpiring sometime in the first decade of the 1900s. ![]()
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