This edition of Romance Readers and Romance Writers (1810) is the first modern scholarly publication of what is arguably Green's most famous novel. As with many of her other works, Green adopts numerous sophisticated methods to parody her contemporaries.
Sarah Green (fl. 1790 – 1825) was an Irish-English novelist and writer.
Green was apparently born in Ireland, though moved to London.
She may have authored Charles Henly, or, The Fugitive Restored (1790), but the first fictional work which can definitely be attributed to her is Court Intrigue, or, The Victim of Constancy (1799). A further sixteen novels followed, the last being Parents and Wives, or, Inconsistency and Mistakes (1825).
"There’s a critifiction (a novel about novels) by Sarah Green (1790-1825) entitled Romance Readers and Romance Writers (1810) that sounds like something Gilbert Sorrentino would have written." -- Steven Moore