Will Warburton
![]() Title page of the first edition  | |
| Author | George Gissing | 
|---|---|
| Language | English | 
| Genre | Novel | 
| Publisher | Archibald Constable & Co. | 
Publication date  | 1905 | 
| Publication place | England | 
| Pages | 333 | 
Will Warburton: A Romance of Real Life was George Gissing's last novel. It was published in 1905, two years after Gissing's death.
Plot summary
Will Warburton is a young gentleman of means, a man of commerce, who, losing everything in speculation, is forced into the life of a grocer,[1] a thing he finds, at first, enormously tragic.
Will keeps his fate secret from his friends and his family and lives a life of humiliation and privation. It is only when the woman with whom he is falling in love discovers he is a grocer, and throws him over, that Will realizes that there is no shame in being a grocer.
Notes
- ^ Adcock, A. St. John (1905). "Gissing's Last Novel," The Bookman, Vol. XXVIII, No. 167, p. 162.
 
Further reading
- Halperin, John (1985). Introduction to Will Warburton. London: Hogarth Press.
 - Partridge, Colin (1981). Introduction to Will Warburton. Brighton, Sussex: The Harvester Press.
 
External links
- Will Warburton, at Internet Archive
 - Will Warburton, at Project Gutenberg
 
 Will Warburton public domain audiobook at LibriVox
