Tayler was a prolific author. As a novelist, he has been classed as an
evangelical author of anti-Catholic books, with
Charlotte Anley,
Anne Howard,
Stephen Jenner,
Lady Catharine Long and
William Francis Wilkinson. The
New York Times described his works as "intimately colored with High Church or Puseyite doctrines," and "pervaded with the spirit of the most zealous piety, and religious fervor." He wrote a preface to
The Confessor: a Jesuit Tale of the Times, Founded on Fact (1854) by
Elizabeth Hardy. His works included: •
May You Like It, by a country curate (1822–3, 2 vols.), anonymous. The first volume was dedicated to his mother; the second explicitly to his maternal grandfather Ralph Winstanley Wood.
Charles Lamb, on whom Tayler had called, wrote of it to
Bernard Barton in 1824 "His Book I "like." It is only too stuft with scripture, too Parsonish." •
A Fireside Book, or, The account of a Christmas spent at Old court (1828), anonymous; a Christmas story, frontispiece by
George Cruikshank. • ''The Records of a Good Man's Life'' (1832, 2 vols.) •
Social Evils and Their Remedy, from 1833, part-published in eight parts, then reprinted in four volumes each containing two parts. The first part was
The Mechanic. •
The Child of the Church of England (1834; new edit. 1852) •
Edward, or almost an Owenite (1840) "Meta Sander" was the pseudonym of , who published a German two-novella volume in 1839/40, the first novella being
Die Unvermählten dealing with the Melder family of
Alsace. •
Margaret, or, the Pearl (1844), novel. •
Tractarianism Not of God; Sermons (1844) •
Thankfulness: A Narrative comprising Passages from the Diary of the Rev. Allan Temple (1848), fiction •
Truth: or, Persis Clareton. A Narrative of Church History in the Seventeenth Century (1853), fiction ==Family==