James Malcolm Rymer

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 13 (May 5, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 11 (April 21, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 10 (April 14, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 8 (March 31, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 9 (April 7, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 7 (March 24, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 6 (March 17, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 5 (March 10, 1866)

August, 2021

A Mystery in Scarlet: No. 1 (February 10, 1866)

August, 2020

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A Mystery in Scarlet: Editorial Introduction

August, 2020

Robert Louis Stevenson, celebrated author of Treasure Island  (1882-3), Kidnapped (1886), and "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1886) was a lifelong connoisseur of "penny dreadfuls": illustrated serial fiction that targeted working-class readers. In Stevenson's childhood, his nurse Alison Cunningham often read dreadfuls to him. In adulthood, Stevenson was haunted by one serial in particular. This was A Mystery in Scarlet by “Malcolm J. Errym,” the pseudonym of James Malcolm Rymer (1814-84).

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