It helps anchor a specific period of this author’s publishing run instead of blending into the undated shelf clutter.
Benjamin Woolley
-
7
Catalog books
-
3
Works
-
1994 to 2012
Strongest span
Who This Author Is
Benjamin Woolley has enough depth here to be more than a raw catalog rollup. This page pulls together 7 catalog-linked books across 1994 to 2012, which makes it easier to separate the strongest starting points from the noisier editions. The clearest lane here leans toward Backlist browsing.
Best for readers who want a dependable place to start before opening the full catalog list. If you want the easiest first click, start with The Queen's Conjuror and branch outward from there. UPB note: the strongest documented run here lands between 1994 to 2012; the most common copies on this page tend to come from Flamingo and Harpercollins.
Best Place To Start
Author At A Glance
Best known for: Backlist browsing entry points • common used copies from Flamingo and Harpercollins
Genres and themes: Backlist browsing
Who this author is best for: readers who want a dependable place to start before opening the full catalog list
UPB note: the strongest documented run here lands between 1994 to 2012; the most common copies on this page tend to come from Flamingo and Harpercollins.
Top Books To Start With
-
Flamingo • 2002 • longer commitment
UPB note: one of the most common used-copy publishers for this author • year signal: 2002 • 352 pages.
-
Heal Thyself: Nicholas Culpeper and the Seventeenth-Century Struggle to Bring Medicine to the People
Harpercollins • 2004 • longer commitment
UPB note: year signal: 2004 • 416 pages.
-
Penguin USA • 1994 • standard commitment
UPB note: year signal: 1994 • 288 pages.
-
HarperPress • 2007 • longer commitment
UPB note: year signal: 2007 • 467 pages.
-
The Bride of Science: Romance, Reason and Byron's Daughter
Trafalgar Square • 2000 • longer commitment
UPB note: year signal: 2000 • 432 pages.
-
HarperCollins Publishers Limited • 2012 • commitment varies by edition
UPB note: year signal: 2012.
How The Picks Compare
- The Queen's Conjuror is the easier short commitment, while Heal Thyself: Nicholas Culpeper and the Seventeenth-Century Struggle to Bring Medicine to the People asks for more reading time up front.
- The Queen's Conjuror gives you an earlier look at this author’s shelf, while Heal Thyself: Nicholas Culpeper and the Seventeenth-Century Struggle to Bring Medicine to the People leans later in the catalog.
- Virtual Worlds is also useful if you want a different publishing lane from The Queen's Conjuror.