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The Castle of Otranto
On the day of his wedding, Conrad, heir to the house of Otranto, is killed in mysterious circumstances. Fearing the end of his dynasty, his father, Manfred, determines to marry Conrad's betrothed, Isabella, until a series of supernatural events stands in his way. . . .
Set in the time of the crusades, The Castle of Otranto established the Gothic as a literary form in Englan...more
Set in the time of the crusades, The Castle of Otranto established the Gothic as a literary form in Englan...more
Paperback, 208 pages
Published
January 29th 2002
by Penguin Classics
(first published 1764)
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Prince Manfred of Otranto in Italy,is looking forward to the wedding of his only son Conrad.The family name must continue!In these violent times (the era of the Crusades),Italian politics dictates that noblemen have sons, to leave all their land and wealth. It doesn't matter that Conrad is only fifteen and sickly.The family of the Prince is composed of the son Conrad,Matilda the daughter, three years older than her brother and the pious wife of Manfred ,Hippolita .Isabella is the intended bride,...more
Oct 31, 2011
Shovelmonkey1
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
people who like falling millinery
Recommended to Shovelmonkey1 by:
1001 books list - bastards!
WARNING: 1001 BOOK THAT THE WRITERS OF THE 1001 BOOKS LIST WANTED TO TORTURE YOU WITH BEFORE YOU DIE
(NB do not assume that said death will be unrelated to the reading of this book.... boredom kills, people.)
This book is very Shakespearian in style and therefore metaphorically and allegorically weighty despite being such a short, light paperback book. I was suckered into reading this because it was a short read. You know how it is, on a whim sometime ago (Christmas 2009), you manfully pledge to r...more
(NB do not assume that said death will be unrelated to the reading of this book.... boredom kills, people.)
This book is very Shakespearian in style and therefore metaphorically and allegorically weighty despite being such a short, light paperback book. I was suckered into reading this because it was a short read. You know how it is, on a whim sometime ago (Christmas 2009), you manfully pledge to r...more
Horace Walpole has inspired me to dance! Woo-Hoo! I finished his book! Yes! Party! Where’s the sangria?
There is something about the eighteenth century Gothics that really make you want to celebrate when you’re through with them. I think it’s the sheer absurdity of them. To the modern reader, this stuff doesn’t make any sense, but to a contemporary? That’s what fascinates me. I’m baffled, repelled, and drawn to it. What readers would have enjoyed this book (and, readers, let me tell you, Walpole...more
There is something about the eighteenth century Gothics that really make you want to celebrate when you’re through with them. I think it’s the sheer absurdity of them. To the modern reader, this stuff doesn’t make any sense, but to a contemporary? That’s what fascinates me. I’m baffled, repelled, and drawn to it. What readers would have enjoyed this book (and, readers, let me tell you, Walpole...more
May 15, 2010
K.D. Oliveros
rated it
3 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
Jzhunagev (who loves horror genre)
Recommended to K.D. by:
501 Must Read Books and 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die
Somewhere in north of England. Between the era of the first crusade, 1095 and 1243, the date of the last. In a old castle called the Otranto. The story opened with the Conrad, 15-y/o son and only heir of Otranto's prince, Manfred was killed by the helmet of a statue of the previous prince Alfonso. On that day, Conrad was about to marry Princess Isabelle. With no other heir and to save his lordship, Manfred thought of divorcing his wife, Hipollita and offered himself to be Isabelle's husband. The...more
Taken out of historical context, The Castle of Otranto is a fun escape into knights, maidens, curses, magic, dynasties, rivalries, and terror. It was, as Horace Walpole argued in one of his introductions, an attempt to establish a new gothic style of writing. In this way, the novel is a comic thriller. It presents realistic reactions to imaginary actions, and it injects comedy to counter to grim tragedy.
But taken in historical context, the novel seems to respond to formative events in Walpole’s...more
But taken in historical context, the novel seems to respond to formative events in Walpole’s...more
Sep 01, 2007
A.
rated it
4 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
people who love thinking or saying, "Uh...wtf?"
Good old Horace Walpole. Like any literary figure, historians are niggling over the "is he or isn't he" details, but why isn't anyone looking into his freakish obsession with Gothic castles? His goal: "I am going to build a little Gothic castle at Strawberry Hill", and he asked his friends for any fragments of old painted glass, armour, or anything. And thus was born Strawberry Hill, the baby Castle of Otranto.
Otranto (the book) came from that foggy time when novels, while trying to present them...more
Otranto (the book) came from that foggy time when novels, while trying to present them...more
Having spent three years in Bloomington getting drunk with fiction writers, I feel that I came dangerously close to losing my ability to appreciate trash. But, thankfully, not so! _The Castle of Otranto_, by Horace Walpole, is not only trash, but ground-breaking, historical, trend-setting trash. It is lauded as the first Gothic novel in English (published, anonymously at first, in 1764). And what a remarkable heap of words it is!
_The Castle of Otranto_ is preposterous, both in content and struct...more
_The Castle of Otranto_ is preposterous, both in content and struct...more
Feb 25, 2008
The Fza
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to The Fza by:
Charrolee thompson
I LOVE THIS BOOK!
I was given this book to read with the preface, "I was not a fan, but I have a feeling you'd like this." And all of a sudden I was in an old world made new... to me.
The Castle of Otranto has a history as interesting and strange as the tale w/in it's pages. Know as the first Gothic Novel (Gothic fiction is a genre of literature that combines horror, romance and mystery offset by elements of fantasy), the book was purported to be a translation based on a manuscript printed near Na...more
I was given this book to read with the preface, "I was not a fan, but I have a feeling you'd like this." And all of a sudden I was in an old world made new... to me.
The Castle of Otranto has a history as interesting and strange as the tale w/in it's pages. Know as the first Gothic Novel (Gothic fiction is a genre of literature that combines horror, romance and mystery offset by elements of fantasy), the book was purported to be a translation based on a manuscript printed near Na...more
This granddaddy of all Gothics is still worth a read. It has its flaws, but Walpole's style is crisp and economical, and the book itself is mercifully brief. Manfred possesses all the important features of the classic gothic hero that Mrs. Radcliffe and others would later use to great advantage, and the initial scenes--particularly the surrealistic tableau of Udolpho's heir flattened by a gigantic helmet and the exciting sequence of Isabella's flight through the castle's subterranean darkness--a...more
A SPECTRE OF FATE [An Ominous Prophecy? As The Past Devours The Future Through The Pure Present]
The Present is the result of Past Events that move towards a Definite Future.
Highlighted by the presence of superior forces, apparition of ghosts, the culmination of an ominous prophecy and a protagonist about to succumb to his demise, the perusal of THE CASTLE OF OTRANTO is like a Greek drama unfolding. As Greek tragedies seem to be the blueprint of Horace Walpole to create this Gothic novel.
In Murak...more
The Present is the result of Past Events that move towards a Definite Future.
Highlighted by the presence of superior forces, apparition of ghosts, the culmination of an ominous prophecy and a protagonist about to succumb to his demise, the perusal of THE CASTLE OF OTRANTO is like a Greek drama unfolding. As Greek tragedies seem to be the blueprint of Horace Walpole to create this Gothic novel.
In Murak...more
The Otranto Observer:
Prince Gets Squashed by Giant Airborne Helmet! Full News on Page Six!
Lord of Otranto Says - "Sorry, the Castle Ain't Mine!"
FULL Interview with Covergirl Isabella - "He was Never the One for Me!"
Love Advice from Star-Struck Pair! Theodore and Matilda Tell All - How YOU Can Find True Love in Just Ten Seconds!
Jerome and Hippolita's 'Faithful's Corner': Why Entering a Monastery's the Only Way to Go!
The Commoner's Chronicle: Bianca and her Fellows Tell Why THEY'RE the Ones Who S...more
Prince Gets Squashed by Giant Airborne Helmet! Full News on Page Six!
Lord of Otranto Says - "Sorry, the Castle Ain't Mine!"
FULL Interview with Covergirl Isabella - "He was Never the One for Me!"
Love Advice from Star-Struck Pair! Theodore and Matilda Tell All - How YOU Can Find True Love in Just Ten Seconds!
Jerome and Hippolita's 'Faithful's Corner': Why Entering a Monastery's the Only Way to Go!
The Commoner's Chronicle: Bianca and her Fellows Tell Why THEY'RE the Ones Who S...more
Jul 09, 2010
Suzanne
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
gothic,
on-my-bookcase
Despite reading like an overly-dramatic soap opera, I found Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto incredibly entertaining! Walpole had no idea what he was starting when he wrote this novel! He really set the bar for Gothic novels (I'm not saying it wasn't an easy standard to overcome because others after him surely did it better.) There's something to be said though for starting a trend that allowed authors to comment on society, religion, and class without ever really commenting on any of thos...more
Cidden gotik bir kitap.. Kasvetli bir şato.. hayaletler.. korkunç olaylar.. tuhaf bir aşk.. herşey güzelde kitabın dili bayağı ağır zor anladım bazı yerleri :P Tabi 100 sayfalık bişey ondan sanırım hikayenin çok eksiği var. Kitap olarak değilde böyle bi kasvetli hikaye okumak isteyenler buyursun :))
Feb 17, 2009
Liz
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Lovers of Gothic literature.
Manfred, the prince of Otranto, is continuously haunted by a prophecy foretelling the demise of his family and the loss of his title, which his ancestors obtained in a less than honorable way. In desperation, he is determined to marry his fifteen-year-old son, Conrad, to the beautiful daughter of a man who has a more legitimate claim to Otranto than Manfred does, in hopes that this will prevent the horrific prophecy from being fulfilled. However, on the very day that the wedding is to take place...more
Horace Walpole's 'The Castle of Otranto' (1764) is almost unanimously considered to be the first example of the 'Gothic' novel, the literary predecessor to the modern horror genre that emerged in eighteeenth-century Britain, and the beginnings of popular fiction. However, to describe Walpole's first and only novel as 'horror' might be to mislead contemporary readers somewhat. If you are expecting blood, gore and demonic possession, you might do better to start off with Matthew Lewis' popular sho...more
The First Gothic Novel
Walpole, Horace (1769/2010). The Castle of Otranto. New York: Oxford World Classics.
This very short book (115 pages) was published in 1769, and it defined the Gothic novel form. It is full of murky castles, stormy weather, princes in disguise, swooning maidens, unbelievable coincidences.
It is a very bad novel, by modern literary standards. The characters are stereotypes, the language is contrived and stilted, punctuation is lacking, and the 3P Narrator's promiscuous shiftin...more
Walpole, Horace (1769/2010). The Castle of Otranto. New York: Oxford World Classics.
This very short book (115 pages) was published in 1769, and it defined the Gothic novel form. It is full of murky castles, stormy weather, princes in disguise, swooning maidens, unbelievable coincidences.
It is a very bad novel, by modern literary standards. The characters are stereotypes, the language is contrived and stilted, punctuation is lacking, and the 3P Narrator's promiscuous shiftin...more
The first Gothic novel, Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto marked the beginnings of a genre that is still prevalent today. The following is a summary of this work.
The novel begins with the impending marriage of Conrad, son the lord of the Castle Otranto, to Isabella. On the day of the marriage, Conrad is mysteriously struck down by a helmet that falls from the sky and crushes his skull and killing him. Remembering the curse set over the inhabitants of Castle of Otranto declaring that, should...more
The novel begins with the impending marriage of Conrad, son the lord of the Castle Otranto, to Isabella. On the day of the marriage, Conrad is mysteriously struck down by a helmet that falls from the sky and crushes his skull and killing him. Remembering the curse set over the inhabitants of Castle of Otranto declaring that, should...more
There are so many reasons that this is a great book. The primary reason is that it sets the tone and format for 100 years worth of literature afterwards. Stoker, Mary Shelley and Poe (among others) owe their fame to Walpole. All of the elements of the Gothic novel start here with Walpole. The evil prince, the haunted castle, the damsel in distress, the perturbed spirit that sets things right. Yep, all of that started here.
There's also Walpole's stated purpose from his preface to the second editi...more
There's also Walpole's stated purpose from his preface to the second editi...more
I read this as part of the online literature class I'm taking, and I have to admit it wasn't too bad. Historically interesting as it's considered to be the first gothic novel, the one that sparked an entire genre.
The story is entertaining. The writing sounds almost tongue-in-cheek in places although I'm not sure if that was Walpole's intent, the effect of translation or simply my impression as a modern reader. The style is such that you can almost see it being acted out on stage with all the at...more
The story is entertaining. The writing sounds almost tongue-in-cheek in places although I'm not sure if that was Walpole's intent, the effect of translation or simply my impression as a modern reader. The style is such that you can almost see it being acted out on stage with all the at...more
Romanzo gotico sì, romanzo gotico no. Di sicuro, con i parametri attuali, la seconda che ho scritto: abituati ad ogni sorta di spaventi e malefiche presenze, al giorno d’oggi vediamo in questo breve romanzo nulla più di una storia di gusto medioevale (tra cavalieri in incognito, tiranni felloni e principesse integerrime) il cui svolgimento è condizionato dalle apparizioni – anche abbastanza goffe – di uno spettro. Quando il libro uscì per la prima volta, però, la situazione era differente: nella...more
Considered the first Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto, by Horace Walpole was published in 1764, and is a delightful read. The novel is filled with mystery, damsels in distress, supernatural happenings, and murder, which for its time, I’m sure, shocked the socks of its readers. The book supposedly inspired the likes of Ann Radcliffe, Bram Stoker, and Edgar Allen Poe.
Upon its original release, Walpole pretended the piece was actually a manuscript printed in Italy during the Renaissance and redi...more
Upon its original release, Walpole pretended the piece was actually a manuscript printed in Italy during the Renaissance and redi...more
“The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?” - Edgar Allan Poe
generally regarded as the first Gothic novel, Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto is about a series of unusual occurrences and ghostly manifestations of gigantic proportions surrounding the demise of Prince Conrad, son of Lord Manfred.
i was surprised to learn that Walpole himself never used the word Gothic to label his work although he did...more
generally regarded as the first Gothic novel, Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto is about a series of unusual occurrences and ghostly manifestations of gigantic proportions surrounding the demise of Prince Conrad, son of Lord Manfred.
i was surprised to learn that Walpole himself never used the word Gothic to label his work although he did...more
This is the very first Gothic novel (if 100 pages counts as a novel), making it a predecessor to the likes of Bram Stoker, Mary Shelley, Edgar Allen Poe, etc. The inciting incident is that a young princess, Isabella, is betrothed to the prince Conrad from a neighboring province, and he is crushed by a massive object that falls from the sky on the morning of their wedding. Conrad's unscrupulous father then decides he wants Isabella for his own bride and attempts to force the marriage, thus settin...more
In een paar dagen op het kasteel van de korzelige en opportunistische Italiaanse prins Manfred gebeurt er vanalles dat duidt op zijn spoedige verval, hoewel hij dat zelf weigert te herkennen.
Deze eerste gothic novel (Walpole noemt het zelf zo) allertijden is een opvallend romantisch werk voor een product uit de het verlichte tijdperk: het bevat onverklaarbare, bovennatuurlijke verschijningen, veel verwijzingen naar Shakespeare, hoog oplopende emoties en een duistere, middeleeuwse setting in een...more
Deze eerste gothic novel (Walpole noemt het zelf zo) allertijden is een opvallend romantisch werk voor een product uit de het verlichte tijdperk: het bevat onverklaarbare, bovennatuurlijke verschijningen, veel verwijzingen naar Shakespeare, hoog oplopende emoties en een duistere, middeleeuwse setting in een...more
Ugh this book. If I hadn't had to read this for university, I would not have managed it past the first page!
I've seen a lot of 4 and 5 star reviews of this book. Why I don't understand. This is considered one of the best Gothic fiction novels, but all it did was bore me.
Then piss me off. 'It is not ours to make election for ourselves; heaven, our fathers, and our husbands, must decide for us.' I just wanted to grab Hippolita and shake her while screaming GET.A.GRIP. Im so glad women aren't l...more
I've seen a lot of 4 and 5 star reviews of this book. Why I don't understand. This is considered one of the best Gothic fiction novels, but all it did was bore me.
Then piss me off. 'It is not ours to make election for ourselves; heaven, our fathers, and our husbands, must decide for us.' I just wanted to grab Hippolita and shake her while screaming GET.A.GRIP. Im so glad women aren't l...more
Jul 29, 2012
Insania
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
gothic-horror-fantasy
Il castello di Otranto è stato scritto di getto, in due soli mesi, da Horace Walpole, figlio dell'allora attuale primo ministro inglese, per "distrarsi dalle occupazioni politiche". E il fatto che sia un ripiego per compensare le fatiche del negotium si sente.
Tralasciando gli elementi che al tempo (fine Settecento) dovevano essere clamorosi e di grande impatto ma che oggi risultano un po' fuori luogo e stridono con le aspettative del lettore - e con ciò mi riferisco agli elementi sovrannaturali...more
Tralasciando gli elementi che al tempo (fine Settecento) dovevano essere clamorosi e di grande impatto ma che oggi risultano un po' fuori luogo e stridono con le aspettative del lettore - e con ciò mi riferisco agli elementi sovrannaturali...more
First published in 1764, this is widely acknowledged as the first 'gothic novel'. It's a slim book (just over 100 pages) but it's absolutely action-packed. Manfred is as black-hearted a villain as one could wish for, Theodore the archetypal 'noble peasant' who later turns out to have royal blood. Bad things happen to Manfred the usurper: his only son is sickly and is killed on the eve of his wedding; Manfred is unwittingly the agent of his daughter Matilda's death, when he mistakes her for Isabe...more
Originally published on my blog here in March 2000.
Until you read some Gothic novels, it may seem strange that they are not more popular today, as the origins of the modern horror genre and parts of science fiction and fantasy. Yet the only one which has consistently survived is Frankenstein, and it could certainly be argued that it is not really a Gothic novel. As popular literature, the Gothic novel reflected the tastes of the time, tastes which are not the same as ours today. (More recent pop...more
Until you read some Gothic novels, it may seem strange that they are not more popular today, as the origins of the modern horror genre and parts of science fiction and fantasy. Yet the only one which has consistently survived is Frankenstein, and it could certainly be argued that it is not really a Gothic novel. As popular literature, the Gothic novel reflected the tastes of the time, tastes which are not the same as ours today. (More recent pop...more
One of the most ludicrous Penguin Classics, this book reads as if the Monty Python boys had teamed up with Sir Walter Scott and they'd taken a whole bunch o' drugs together. If you're expecting this progenitor of the Gothic novel to have spooky atmosphere, credible shocks and believable characters, stop right there. It's an eighteenth century novel, and that means it's pre-Romantic. The novel was not considered a serious literary form at the time (or at least, not by most people) - real literatu...more
Until I read a recent review of this book on Goodreads, I had completely forgotten that I had read it many years ago in my late teens.
In those days I was fascinated by Gothic architecture as well as the neo-Gothic architecture of the nineteenth century, or 'Gothic Revival' as it is called by some. The art historian Kenneth Clark claimed in his 1928 book, "The Gothic Revival", that the Gothic tradition never actually died in Britain. He wrote:a tiny stream of the Gothic tradition was never lost,...more
In those days I was fascinated by Gothic architecture as well as the neo-Gothic architecture of the nineteenth century, or 'Gothic Revival' as it is called by some. The art historian Kenneth Clark claimed in his 1928 book, "The Gothic Revival", that the Gothic tradition never actually died in Britain. He wrote:a tiny stream of the Gothic tradition was never lost,...more
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Horatio Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford, was an English art historian, man of letters, antiquarian and politician. He is now largely remembered for Strawberry Hill, the home he built in Twickenham, south-west London where he revived the Gothic style some decades before his Victorian successors, and for his Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto. Along with the book, his literary reputation rests on his L...more
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“I can forgive injuries, but never benefits.”
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Henry, a wonderfully understated commentary on what mu...more
Mar 16, 2013 11:33am
Mar 16, 2013 02:10pm