Alice Muriel Williamson
Encyclopedia
Alice Muriel Williamson was a British novelist.

Born Alice Muriel Livingston, she married Charles Norris Williamson
Charles Norris Williamson
Charles Norris Williamson was a British writer, motoring journalist and founder of the Black and White who was perhaps best-known for his collaboration with his wife, Alice Muriel Williamson, in a number of novels and travelogues....

 (1859–1920) in 1894 and many of her books were jointly written with her husband. After her marriage she introduced herself as Mrs. C.N.Williamson. A number of their novels cover the early days of motoring and can also be read as travelogues.

Under the pseydonym Alice Stuyvesant she wrote "The Hidden House" serialised in The Cavalier Dec 13, Dec 20, Dec 27 1913, and Jan 3, Jan 10 1914.

Alice apparently said of her husband "Charlie Williamson could do anything in the world except write stories": she said of herself "I can't do anything else." She continued to write after her husband's death in 1920.

Works

  • Berry Goes to Monte Carlo (1921) (with C N Williamson)
  • The Botor Chaperon (with C. N. Williamson), (sl) The Grand Magazine
    The Grand Magazine
    The Grand Magazine was the first British pulp magazine. It was published monthly between February 1905 and April 1940. Published by George Newnes, it initially emulated Newnes's highly successful Strand Magazine, featuring a mix of fiction and non-fiction...

     Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec 1906, Jan 1907
  • The Car of Destiny (1907) (with C N Williamson)
  • The Case of Ann Arthur, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Mar 1930
  • Champion: The Story of a Motor Car (1913) with C N Williamson
  • The Chauffeur and the Chaperon (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) The Delineator Oct 1906
  • The Darkened Room, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Apr 1933
  • The Diamond Code, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Mar 1932
  • The Door Between, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Dec 1932
  • Duchess, Behave! (with Sydney Arundel), (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Jun 1929
  • The Eccentricity of Fleetwood (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) The Strand Magazine (US) Aug 1901
  • Flower Forbidden (with C. N. Williamson) [Part 1], (sl) Smith’s Magazine Apr 1911
  • The Girl with One Dress, (??) Motion Picture Magazine Jul 1927
  • The Heather Moon (1912) with C N Williamson
  • The Hidden House (1913–1914) (as Alice Stuyvesant)
  • Honeymoon Hate, (sl) The Saturday Evening Post Jul 9, Jul 16 1927
  • The House of Silence, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Dec 1931
  • The Inky Way (1931) (as A M Williamson)
  • Lady Betty Across the Water (1906) (with C N Williamson)
  • Lady Betty Crosses the Ocean (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) Ladies Home Journal Oct 1905
  • Lady Betty Runs Away (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) Ladies Home Journal Jan 1906
  • The Lady in Gray, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Sep 1932
  • The Lightning Conductor (1905) (with C N Williamson)
  • The Lightning Conductress (1916)(with C N Williamson)
  • The Lightning Conductor Comes Back (1933)(as A M Williamson)
  • The Lion’s Mouse (with C. N. Williamson), (sl) Munsey’s Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug 1918
  • Lord John (with C. N. Williamson), (nv) Argosy (UK) Jul 1933
  • The Love Pirate (1913) (with C N Williamson)
  • The Love Trees (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) Munsey’s Dec 1915
  • The Man from Joliet, (na) Short Stories Aug 1915
  • The Motor Maid (1910) (with C N Williamson)
  • The Murder House, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Oct 1932
  • My Lady Cinderella (1906) (as A M Williamson)
  • Passport, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Sep 1930
  • The Port of Adventure (1913 (with C N Williamson)
  • The Princess Passes (with C. N. Williamson), (sl) Metropolitan Magazine Oct, Nov 1904
  • The Princess Virginia (with C. N. Williamson), (sl) Ladies Home Journal Oct, Dec 1906
  • The Princess Virginia (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) Ladies Home Journal Jan 1907
  • Publicity for Anne, (ss) Charm Dec 19 1925
  • A Real English Christmas with Lady Betty (with C. N. Williamson), (ss) Ladies Home Journal Dec 1906
  • The Red Pen Murder, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Jan 1931
  • Rosemary, A Christmas story (1906) (as A M Williamson)
  • The Sea Could Tell, (na) 1904 Five-Novels Monthly Oct 1929
  • The Second Latchkey (1920
  • Secret Gold, (ss) The Country Gentleman Oct 11 1924
  • The Shop-Girl (with C. N. Williamson), (n.) Munsey’s Jul 1914
  • This Woman to This Man (with C. N. Williamson), (sl) All-Story Weekly Apr 29, May 13, 1916
  • Tiger Ride, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Jun 1931
  • The Truth About Tanita, (nv) Five-Novels Monthly Sep 1931
  • The Underground Syndicate, (na) 1910 Five-Novels Monthly Jul 1932
  • The War Wedding (1916)(with C N Williamson)
  • What’s in a Name?, (ss) The New Passing Show May 14, 1932
  • A Woman in Grey (1898)(as A M Williamson)
  • A Woman Tried to Steal My Husband, (ar) Cosmopolitan Oct 1925

Translations

Her mystery
Mystery fiction
Mystery fiction is a loosely-defined term.1.It is often used as a synonym for detective fiction or crime fiction— in other words a novel or short story in which a detective investigates and solves a crime mystery. Sometimes mystery books are nonfiction...

 A Woman in Grey (1898) was translated and adapted into Japanese
Japanese language
is a language spoken by over 130 million people in Japan and in Japanese emigrant communities. It is a member of the Japonic language family, which has a number of proposed relationships with other languages, none of which has gained wide acceptance among historical linguists .Japanese is an...

 by Kuroiwa Ruiko(黒岩涙香) by the title Yureito (幽霊塔; Ghost Tower) in 1901, and it was adapted by Edogawa Rampo
Edogawa Rampo
, better known by the pseudonym , was a Japanese author and critic who played a major role in the development of Japanese mystery fiction. Many of his novels involve the detective hero Kogorō Akechi, who in later books was the leader of a group of boy detectives known as the .Rampo was an admirer...

(江戸川乱歩) in 1937-1938.

External links

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