- Wilkie Collins and the Form of the Novel
- The Victorian Sensation Novel, 1860-1880
- Gothic Elements in The Moonstone
- “Sensation for which I find no name”: Nerves and Narration in The Woman in White
- The Sensation Novel: Selected Bibliography
- Collins's 'detective business': The Moonstone as a Detective Novel
- Wilkie Collins's style
- The Detective Novel
- Authenticism and Post-Authenticism: Wilkie Collins's Armadale and Michael Cox's The Meaning of Night: A Confession
- Realism
- Men in Tears: Moral, Physical, and Emotional Exhaustion in the Collins' Sensation Novels
- Love and Law in Wilkie Collins's Fictional Families
- "The Law of Abduction": Marriage and Divorce in Victorian Sensation and “Mission” Novels
- The Law of the Father: Victorian Sentimentality and the New Fatherhood
- The Victorian Custody Novel: Deceived and Deserted Daughters in The Evil Genius
Last modified 26 November 2011