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Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
Sheridan Le Fanu 002.png
Born Joseph Thomas Sheridan Le Fanu
(1814-08-28)28 August 1814
Dublin, Ireland
Died 7 February 1873(1873-02-07) (aged 58)
Dublin, Ireland
Occupation Novelist
Nationality Irish (British)
Genre Gothic horror, mystery
Literary movement Dark romanticism

Joseph Thomas Sheridan Le Fanu (/ˈlɛfənj/; 28 August 1814 – 7 February 1873) was an Irish writer of Gothic tales and mystery novels. He was a leading ghost story writer of the nineteenth century and was central to the development of the genre in the Victorian era.M. R. James described Le Fanu as "absolutely in the first rank as a writer of ghost stories". Three of his best-known works are Uncle Silas, Carmilla and The House by the Churchyard.

Sheridan Le Fanu was born at 45 Lower Dominick Street, Dublin, into a literary family of Huguenot, Irish and English descent. He had an elder sister, Catherine Frances, and a younger brother, William Richard. His parents were Thomas Philip Le Fanu and Emma Lucretia Dobbin. Both his grandmother Alicia Sheridan Le Fanu and his great-uncle Richard Brinsley Sheridan were playwrights (his niece Rhoda Broughton would become a successful novelist), and his mother was also a writer, producing a biography of Charles Orpen. Within a year of his birth his family moved to the Royal Hibernian Military School in the Phoenix Park, where his father, a Church of Ireland clergyman, was appointed to the chaplaincy of the establishment. The Phoenix Park and the adjacent village and parish church of Chapelizod would appear in Le Fanu's later stories.


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