Other early speakers wrote poetry, stories, and essays in the language; Henri Vallienne was the first to write novels in Esperanto.
The first female Esperanto novelist was Edith Alleyne Sinnotte with her book Lilio published in 1918.
[1] Except for a handful of poems, most of the literature from Esperanto's first two decades is now regarded as of historical interest only.
Between the two World Wars, several new poets and novelists published their first works, including several recognized as the first to produce work of outstanding quality in the still-young language: Julio Baghy, Eŭgeno Miĥalski, Kálmán Kalocsay, Heinrich Luyken, and Jean Forge.
Esperanto has seen a solid production of material in braille since the work of the blind Russian Esperantist Vasili Eroshenko, who wrote and taught in Japan and China in the 1910s and 1920s, and Harold Brown wrote several modern plays in Esperanto.