Eden wrote two successful novels:
The Semi-Detached House (1859) and
The Semi-Attached Couple (1860).
Semi-detached houses were becoming a more widespread form of dwelling for the middle classes, as
Britain continued to industrialise and urbanise. The latter book was written in 1829, but not published until 1860. Both have a comic touch that critics have compared with that of
Jane Austen, who was Eden's favourite author. The first of the two has been described by
John Sutherland as "an accomplished study in the social contrasts of aristocratic style, bourgeois respectability and crass vulgarity." Eden's letters were published by
Violet Dickinson, a close friend of
Virginia Woolf. They contain memorable comments on English public life, most famously her welcome for the new
King William IV as "an immense improvement on the last unforgiving animal
George IV — this man at least wishes to make everybody happy." Emily Eden's niece Eleanor Lena Eden also took to writing, mainly children's books under the pseudonym Lena. The structure of her 1867 novel
Dumbleton Common, which has "Little Miss Patty" detailing gossip in a hamlet outside London, was inspired by
Cranford. ==Lord Melbourne==