Amy H. Sturgis's Blog, page 8

October 4, 2024

Halloween Countdown 2024, Day 4

Because we mentioned The Castle of Otranto yesterday, let’s show some love for the dark reimagining of Walpole’s novel by Clara Reeve, The Old English Baron (1778). Reeve called it Otranto’s “literary offspring.”

Read it here.

Quote: …he thought he saw a glimmering light upon a staircase before him. “If,” said he, “this apartment is haunted, I will use my endeavours to discover the cause of it; and if the spirit appears visibly, I will speak to it.”

He was preparing to descend the staircase, when he heard several knocks at the door by which he first entered the room; and, stepping backward, the door was clapped to with great violence. Again fear attacked him, but he resisted it, and boldly cried out, “Who is there?”

Frontispiece illustration to the 1778 edition of The Old English Baron, depicting frightened people encountering a suit of armor (that appears to be threatening them).ALT
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Published on October 04, 2024 04:34

October 3, 2024

Halloween Countdown 2024, Day 3

We have even more evidence of which Gothic novels the women who worked in 19th-century mills in Lowell, Massachusetts read and enjoyed. The next few posts will highlight these titles.

The Oxford World Classics edition of The Castle of Otranto with artwork depicting a bowed figure in grief.ALT

One of the most popular titles was The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole (1764).

Read it here.

Quote:  …and then the figure, turning slowly round, discovered to Frederic the fleshless jaws and empty sockets of a skeleton, wrapt in a hermit’s cowl.

“Angels of peace protect me!” cried Frederic, recoiling.

“Deserve their protection!” said the spectre.

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Published on October 03, 2024 04:08

October 2, 2024

Halloween Countdown 2024, Day 2

Another Gothic title very popular with women working in 19th-century factories in Manchester and Lancashire, UK, was The String of Pearls; or The Barber of Fleet Street (aka Sweeney Todd)  (1846-1847) by James Malcolm Rymer and Thomas Peckett Prest.

Read it here.

Quote: “How still everything was in those vaults of old St. Dunstan’s. Were there no spirits from another world—spirits of the murdered, to flit in horrible palpability before the eyes of that man who had cut short their thread of life? Surely if ever a visitant from another world could have been expected, it would have been to appear to Todd to convince him that there was more beyond the grave than a forgotten name and a mouldering skeleton.”

Vintage illustration of Sweeney Todd, The Barber of Fleet Street, depicting a grotesque figure with a blade.ALT
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Published on October 02, 2024 05:15

October 1, 2024

Halloween Countdown 2024, Day 1

Halloween season is here!

Since 2005, I’ve been observing a Halloween countdown on whatever social media I was using at the time with a daily post throughout October. These days I am primarily on Mastodon (so if you’re in the Fediverse, or connected to it via Threads or some other means, please say hi!), but I also post on Tumblr, my Goodreads blog, and Dreamwidth, among other places. 

I look forward to sharing October with you! Happy Countdown to Halloween 2024!

This year I will focus on Halloween-friendly texts (long and short) available for free online. I will try to lean away from the usual suspects and, I hope, bring you some treats that you will enjoy!

This countdown will have several separate parts. The first part is inspired by Bridget M. Marshall’s excellent 2021 work Industrial Gothic: Workers, Exploitation and Urbanization in Transatlantic Nineteenth-Century Literature. In her book, Marshall notes that dark and dreadful Gothic novels were very popular with the “mill girls” who worked in 19th-century factories. I’d like to start the countdown by recommending some of the shiver-inducing texts these women reported reading and savoring.

Vintage illustration in black and white of a Victorian woman being threatened by a brute with a weapon. ALTHere begins the Day 1 post!

One of the most popular titles with women working in factories in Manchester and Lancashire, UK, was Mysteries of London (1844-1845) by G.W.M. Reynolds.

Read it here.

Quote: “Perhaps there is no other cry in the world, save that of ‘fire!’ more calculated to spread terror and dismay, when falling suddenly and unexpectedly upon the ears of a party of revellers, than that of ‘A corpse! a corpse!’”

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Published on October 01, 2024 04:42

Me on September 30 vs. me on October 1. 🎃

A white Valenciano pumpkin from my pumpkin patch sitting on a wood table in front of a brick wall.ALTMy white pumpkin with a painted jack-o’-lantern face in shadow, partly lit by a candle in the dark. ALT

Me on September 30 vs. me on October 1. 🎃

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Published on October 01, 2024 04:18

September 30, 2024

It’s almost October, which means it’s almost time to start my annual re-reading of one of my…

A picture of A NIGHT IN THE LONESOME OCTOBER (with cover art depicting a meeting of many familiar Gothic characters, including Sherlock Homes and Count Dracula in the forefront) sitting on a brick walk beside a stone gargoyle.ALT

It’s almost October, which means it’s almost time to start my annual re-reading of one of my all-time favorite books, A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny. With 31 chapters, one for each day of the month, it is a fantastic mash-up of creepy seasonal goodness wrapped into a compelling story, a kind of literary advent calendar for Halloween.

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Published on September 30, 2024 04:40

September 27, 2024

Not long now till my new book comes out! Una by Una!

unamccormack:


Not long now till my new book comes out! Una by Una!


Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: Asylum


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Published on September 27, 2024 17:02

September 26, 2024

New essay on the Vorkosigan saga

I am very happy to share that my essay “‘Lifting Old Curses’: The mirror dance of The Flowers of Vashnoi and The Mountains of Mourning” has been published in Short But Concentrated #2: a second essay symposium on the works of Lois McMaster Bujold, edited by the brilliant @unamccormackThe ebook version is free for download here.

The cover of Short But Concentrated #2: a second essay symposium on the works of Lois McMaster Bujold edited by Una McCormack. The abstract shapes of the background art are bright jewel tones.ALT
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Published on September 26, 2024 04:59

New essay on the Vorkosigan saga!

I am very happy to share that my essay “‘Lifting Old Curses’: The mirror dance of The Flowers of Vashnoi and The Mountains of Mourning” has been published in Short But Concentrated #2: a second essay symposium on the works of Lois McMaster Bujold, edited by the brilliant @unamccormackThe ebook version is free for download here.

The cover of Short But Concentrated #2: a second essay symposium on the works of Lois McMaster Bujold edited by Una McCormack. The abstract shapes of the background art are bright jewel tones.ALT
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Published on September 26, 2024 04:59

September 18, 2024

Radium Age

My latest “Looking Back on Genre History” segment is now available on Episode 741 of the StarShipSofa podcast. I discuss the Radium Age imprint of reissued science fiction classics from 1900-1935 published by MIT Press.

The "Looking Back on Genre History with Amy H. Sturgis" logo from the StarShipSofa podcast with retrofuturist artwork of a rocket ship in space.ALTPictured are two book titles with retrofuturist cover art from the Radium Age series from MIT Press, specifically The Heads of Cerberus and Other Stories by Francis Stevens and The People of the Ruins by Edward Shanks.ALTPictured are two book titles with retrofuturist cover art from the Radium Age series from MIT Press, specifically The Inhumans and Other Stories edited and translated by Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay and Man's World by Charlotte Haldane.ALT
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Published on September 18, 2024 03:42