Joseph Paul Christopher Hatton (1841–1907) was a novelist and journalist.
Hatton married Louisa Johnson and had three children Ellen Howard Hatton, Bessie Lyle Hatton and Frank Hatton.[1] His brother Joshua Hatton was also a journalist.
Editor
- Bristol Mirror
- Gentleman's Magazine
- School Board Chronicle
- Illustrated Midland News
- The People (1892)
Novels
- Bitter Sweets: a Love Story London 1865.
- By Order of the Czar. A drama in five acts London : Hutchinson & Co., 1904.
- Captured by Cannibals. Some incidents in the life of Horace Duran Hodder & Stoughton: London, 1888.
- Christopher Henrick: his Life and Adventures London, 1869.
- Cigarette Papers for after dinner smoking Anthony Treherne & Co.: London, 1902.
- Clytie: a Novel of Modern Life London, Guildford, 1874.
- Cruel London London, 1878.
- The Dagger and the Cross London : Hutchinson & Co., 1897.
- The Gay World London : Hurst & Blackett, 1877.
- In Male Attire: a Romance of the Day London : Hutchinson & Co., 1900.
- In the Lap of Fortune. A story stranger than fiction. London, Guildford [printed], 1873.
- Kites and Pigeons London, 1872.
- The Park Lane Mystery: a Story of Love and Magic London, 1887.
- The Princess Mazaroff. A romance London : Hutchinson & Co., 1891.
- The Queen of Bohemia London, Beccles, 1877.
- Three Recruits, and the girls they left behind them London : Hurst & Blackett, 1880.
[edit] References
- ^ Andrew Sanders, ‘Hatton, Joseph Paul Christopher in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography