![]() ![]() William Black: Prince Fortunatus (1890) Black lived at 1 Paston Place, Brighton from 1879 until his death in 1898 Steven Berkoff: Brighton Beach Scumbags (play, 1994) Youth corrupted by ‘rotten sub-culture, cheap tabloids’ Bennett started writing Clayhanger while staying at the Royal Albion Hotel in 1910. Hilda runs a boarding house in Preston Street. Samuel Beazley: The Boarding House, or Five hours at Brighton (1814) A farce in two actsĪrnold Bennett: Hilda Lessways (1911). K I H Barratt: The Whitest Woman on the Beach (2006) Self-published ![]() Marion Babson: The Cat Who Wasn’t a Dog (2003) Val Andrews: Sherlock Holmes and the Brighton Pavilion Mystery (1989) Nick Alexander: 50 Reasons to Say Goodbye (2004) Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice (1813) Much talk about going to Brighton while the military camps are on the Downs. Ainsworth lived at 5 Arundel Terrace, KempTown 1853-1867 William Harrison Ainsworth: Ovingdean Grange: A tale of the South Downs (1860) King Charles II escapes to France. In some of the fantasy novels Brighton is transformed (see, for example, Phillip Reeve and John Hart) and may not be recognisable. ![]() Nor does it include works by authors living in Brighton but set elsewhere. It does not include works that may be based on Brighton but are not clearly identified as such. This list includes only novels and plays with a specific Brighton location. ![]()
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