'' publication (1845) The stories were reprints, or sometimes rewrites, of the earliest
Gothic thrillers such as
The Castle of Otranto or
The Monk, as well as new stories about famous criminals. The first ever penny blood, published in 1836, was called
Lives of the Most Notorious Highwaymen, Footpads, &c. The story continued over 60 issues, each eight pages of tightly packed text with one half-page illustration.
The Mysteries of London (inspired by the French serial
The Mysteries of Paris), and
Varney the Vampire (1845–1847).
Varney is the tale of the vampire Sir Francis Varney and introduced many of the
tropes present in
vampire fiction recognizable to modern audiences—it was the first story to refer to sharpened teeth for a vampire.
Highwaymen were popular heroes;
Black Bess or the Knight of the Road, outlining the largely imaginary exploits of real-life English highwayman
Dick Turpin, continued for 254 episodes and was well over 2,000 pages long. Turpin was not executed until page 2,207. Some lurid stories purported to be based on fact:
Spring-Heeled Jack was what would now be called an
urban myth. The first 'sighting' of him was in 1837, and he was described as having a terrifying and frightful appearance, with diabolical physiognomy, clawed hands and eyes that "resembled red balls of fire". He was mainly sighted in London but popped up elsewhere and seems to have been a source of frightened fascination for several decades. At the height of Spring-Heeled Jack hysteria, several women reported being attacked by a clawed monster of a man breathing blue flames. The last 'sighting' was in Liverpool in 1904. In 1838,
Robin Hood featured in a series of penny dreadfuls titled
Robin Hood and Little John: or, The Merry Men of Sherwood Forest, which sparked the beginning of the mass circulation of Robin Hood stories. Other serials were thinly disguised
plagiarisms of popular contemporary literature. The publisher
Edward Lloyd, for instance, published numerous hugely successful penny serials derived from the works of Charles Dickens, such as
Oliver Twiss and
Nickelas Nicklebery. The illustration which featured at the start of each issue was an integral part of the dreadfuls' appeal, often acting as a teaser for future installments. As one reader said, "You see's an engraving of a man hung up, burning over a fire, and some [would] go mad if they couldn't learn ... all about him." One publisher's rallying cry to his illustrators was "more blood – much more blood!" Numerous competitors quickly followed, including ''Boys' Leisure Hour
, Boys' Standard
, and Young Men of Great Britain
(a short lived companion to Boys of England''). As the price and quality of other types of fiction works were the same, these also fell under the general definition of penny dreadfuls. Appearing in the 1860s, American
dime novels were edited and rewritten for a British audience. These appeared in booklet form, such as the ''Boy's First Rate Pocket Library''.
Frank Reade,
Buffalo Bill, and
Deadwood Dick were all popular with the penny dreadful audience. The penny dreadfuls were influential since they were, in the words of one commentator, "the most alluring and low-priced form of escapist reading available to ordinary youth, until the advent in the early 1890s of future newspaper magnate
Alfred Harmsworth's price-cutting 'halfpenny dreadfuller. In reality, the serial novels were overdramatic and sensational but generally harmless. If anything, the penny dreadfuls, although not the most enlightening or inspiring of literary selections, resulted in increasingly literate youth in the Industrial period. The wide circulation of this sensationalist literature, however, contributed to an ever-greater fear of crime in mid-Victorian Britain. ==Decline==