Anna Eliza Bray (December 25, 1790 — January 21, 1883) was a British novelist.
She was the daughter of Mr John Kempe, and was married first to Charles Alfred Stothard, son of Thomas Stothard, R.A., and himself an artist, and secondly to the Rev. Edward Atkyns Bray. She wrote about a dozen novels, chiefly historical, and The Borders of the Tamar and Tavy (1836), an account of the traditions and superstitions of the neighbourhood of Tavistock in the form of letters to Robert Southey, of whom she was a great friend. This is probably the most valuable of her writings. Among her works are Branded, Good St. Louis and his Times, Trelawney, and an Historical Romance.