![]() First British edition (Sidgwick & Jackson, printed in the US)[1]  | |
| Author | Bram Stoker | 
|---|---|
| Language | English | 
| Publisher | Sturgis & Walton (US) | 
Publication date  | November 1910[2] | 
| Media type | Print (hardcover) | 
Famous Impostors is the last of four non-fiction books completed by Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula.[3] It features numerous historical impostors and hoaxes.
The first edition was published by the Sturgis & Walton Company of New York in November 1910.[2] The British edition was published by Sidgwick & Jackson of London, also dated 1910, but printed in the United States.[1] Newspaper and magazine coverage implies that it was published in January 1911.[4]
Contents
Dashed (—) annotations are by Wikipedia.
- Pretenders
- Perkin Warbeck
 - The Hidden King — Sebastian of Portugal
 - Stephan Mali — Šćepan Mali
 - The False Dauphins
 - Princess Olive
 
 - Practitioners of Magic
 - The Wandering Jew
 - John Law
 - Witchcraft and Clairvoyance 
- Witches
 - Doctor Dee
 - La Voisin
 - Sir Edward Kelley
 - Mother Damnable - a brewer and owner of todays The World's End, Camden. Suspected witch after her death.
 - Matthew Hopkins
 
 - Arthur Orton (Tichborne claimant)
 - Women as Men
- The Motive for Disguise
 - Hannah Snell
 - La Maupin
 - Mary East
 
 - Hoaxes, Etc. 
- Two London Hoaxes — includes the Berners Street hoax
 - The Cat Hoax — a scam to buy cats brought to a certain address
 - The Military Review — a false parade announced at 1812
 - The Toll-Gate — a practical joke played by Charles Mayne Young for not paying a toll
 - The Marriage Hoax — a marriage stopped by the false claim that the groom already had a wife and children
 - Buried Treasure — a false treasure unearthed by a victim and a swindler, which gives his share to the victim in exchange for something of value
 - Dean Swift's Hoax — an alleged letter written by a criminal about his accomplices and hideouts
 - Hoaxed Burglars — thieves steal a secure box containing lead
 - Bogus Sausages — sausages are discovered to be skins filled with bread
 - The Moon Hoax
 
 - Chevalier d'Eon
 - The Bisley Boy — was Queen Elizabeth I of England a man?
 
References
- 1 2 Copyright page. Full view of the UK edition, London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1910 (original from University of Wisconsin–Madison). HathiTrust Digital Library.
 - 1 2 Copyright page. Full view of the US edition, New York: Sturgis & Walton, 1910 (original from University of California–Berkeley). HathiTrust Digital Library.
 - ↑ "Bram Stoker". Bibliography with numerous front cover images and price data. Fantastic Fiction.
 - ↑ Famous Impostors title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
 
External links
- Famous Impostors at Project Gutenberg
 
 Famous Impostors public domain audiobook at LibriVox- Famous Impostors at BramStoker.org Full PDF version of Famous Impostors.
 
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