Chetwynd Calverley is a collection of short stories written by William Harrison Ainsworth. The novel is a collection of nine fictional stories written in a single draft so the audience can read them. The readers will flow along with the romanticism in the story. With a stunning new cover and professionally typeset manuscript, Chetwynd Calverley is both modern and readable. The story contains so many turns and twists that it may keep a reader engaged. As the protagonist faces conflict, readers will be drawn into the story and held captive by the author's writing style. The characters are well-developed and relatable.
A 19th-century English historian and author, William Harrison Ainsworth studied law and worked in the publishing industry along with journalism and literature. William Harrison Ainsworth wrote more than 39 novels on various topics. William Harrison was educated at Manchester Grammar School. Some of his best and most well-known novels are The Tower of London (1840), Windsor Castle (1843), The Lancashire Witches (1848), and Old St. Paul's (1841). He was a well-trained lawyer, but he was uninterested in the profession, so he gave up and decided to devote himself to the world of writing. Ainsworth's first success as a writer came with his work "Rookwood" in 1834, and he last appeared in the year 1881.