Book detail: The Baronet's Bride: Or a Woman's Vengeance is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
This work belongs to the sensation fiction tradition of the nineteenth century, a genre characterized by melodramatic plots, moral transgressions, and heightened emotional stakes. The title suggests a narrative centered on matrimonial conflict, with the alternative subtitle indicating a plot driven by a female protagonist's pursuit of vengeance against a baronet, a hereditary title in the British aristocracy. Such novels typically examined the precarious position of women within marriage and property law, reflecting contemporary anxieties about class, gender, and social mobility. The dual title structure was common in Victorian publishing, offering prospective readers both a genteel description and a more sensational hook. Without specific attribution, the work may be attributed to the anonymous or pseudonymous authorship practices common in popular fiction of the period, when many writers, particularly women, published without revealing their identities.
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