Clara Reeve (
1729 -
1807), novelist, born in
Ipswich,
England, was the author of several novels, of which only one is remembered--The Champion of Virtue, later known as The Old English Baron (1777), written in imitation of, or rivalry with, the
Castle of Otranto by
Horace Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford, with which it has often been printed. Her novel noticeably influenced
Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein. She also wrote the
epistolatory novel The School for Widows (1791). Her innovative history of prose fiction, The Progress of Romance (1785), can be regarded generally as a precursor to modern histories of the novel and specifically as upholding the tradition of female literary history heralded by
Elizabeth Rowe (1674 – 1737) and Susannah Dobson, d. 1795.
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