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Reading Classic Horror > Gothic But Necessarily Horror

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message 1: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (last edited Sep 15, 2011 08:49AM) (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
This is a thread for books that are not really horror, but fall into the gothic category.

Here is a link to the Wikipedia.org article about Gothic Fiction:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_f...


message 2: by Guido (new)

Guido Henkel (guidohenkel) | 12 comments Top of the list has to be

"The Seance" by Jon Harwood

The Seance by John Harwood


MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) When I think of my favorite gothic novels, no matter what century, the first one that comes to my mind is always Rebecca.


message 4: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I would like to read Rebecca.


message 5: by MountainAshleah (last edited Sep 28, 2011 07:38AM) (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) I really love it, and I also love the 1940 B&W film. I think the two go together quite well. There are other productions of Rebecca--I've seen them all, junky that I am--but I still like the Hitchcock version best. Mrs Danvers is one of the all-time greatest villains, and nobody plays Mrs Danvers better than the great Judith Anderson.


MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Guido wrote: "Top of the list has to be

"The Seance" by Jon Harwood

The Seance by John Harwood"


I just requested The Seance from the library. I'm holding you to your assessment ;}.


message 7: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I've seen the 1940 Hitchcock version. Excellent.


message 8: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I'm sure that someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but

Ann Radcliffe's novels fall in this category that I have read.

The Mysteries of Udolpho
The Romance of the Forest
The Italian

And Horace Walpole

The Castle of Otranto


message 9: by Philip (new)

Philip Hemplow | 21 comments Rather more modern, but with historical settings and verrry Gothic, are the first three Patrick McGrath novels:

The Grotesque
Spider
Dr. Haggard's Disease.

All three are absolutely excellent portrayals of insanity, with the twist that it's only towards the very end of each one that you realise just how insane the narrator is. The Grotesque got turned into a film, apparently a fairly mediocre one starring Sting, and Cronenberg filmed Spider (starring Ralph Fiennes as the neatest-haired schizophrenic I've ever seen). The books are still better though.


message 10: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 164 comments His Asylum is an excellent Gothic as well.


message 11: by Philip (new)

Philip Hemplow | 21 comments I wasn't such a fan of Asylum myself, though I'm not really sure why because it got rave reviews. It started well enough, but I just lost my enthusiasm for it halfway through. His more recent ones haven't really grabbed me either.


message 12: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Sounds like these might be good on audio . . .


message 13: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I would consider The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne (one of my favorites) to be gothic. It has an atmosphere that gives it a sinister, otherworldly feel. You don't quite know what is real and what isn't. It's an excellent story about the power of guilt.


message 14: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "I would consider The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne (one of my favorites) to be gothic. It has an atmosphere that gives it a sinister, otherworldly feel. You don't quite know w..."

TSL is one of my all-time favorites. I read it for the first time in 1980 and it literally changed my life. One of the few books that ever has.


message 15: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) I just finished Carmilla--a great gothic/vampire/erotic/horror tale. Absolutely loved it.


message 16: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
MountainShelby, The Scarlet Letter was one of those required reading books in school that absolutely loved! Glad you enjoyed Carmilla.


message 17: by Steve (new)

Steve | 31 comments I'm reading Woman in White, by Collins. I think it's more a gothic mystery. But it's early yet. Great atmosphere.


message 18: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Great book!!!


message 19: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) I am amazed Charlotte Dacre wasn't burned at the stake for Zofloya. Wow, is this text openly sexual for a woman in her day . . . I keep reading passages, thinking "Did she just say that?" Of course it's not even as racy as a paperback romance novel by today's standards . . . but for a female author writing under a female name in 1806. Whew.


message 20: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I was surprised at how graphic the sex is in Moll Flanders, although that is written by a man.


message 21: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Oh yes, it sure was graphic. And worse, my grad school instructor kept asking us, as a group and alone in mandatory meetings in his office, "But does it work for you?" [on the level of pornography]. That was many, many years ago. I wouldn't answer him then, and I wouldn't answer him now. I still think, what a perv.


message 22: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
That seems like an inappropriate question to ask students!


message 23: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) Oh yes, very. I don't know if the guys answered him, LOL! Anyway, I did like the book, very much, a crazy romp. There was a film version that was quite good with Alex Kingston as Moll. Still working on Zofloya . . .


message 24: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I started Moll, but I wasn't in the mood (no pun intended). I'll get back to it one day. I'm curious about Zofloya now...


message 25: by MountainAshleah (last edited Oct 14, 2011 10:27AM) (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) I'll be sure to post a review. It's a very strange read on a number of levels--conventional in some aspects (the gothic machinery and language) and very atypical in other aspects. It's hard not to put on the psychobabble hat and think the author was working out some major anger issues in her personal life, which was also unconventional--three children out of wedlock for starters.


message 26: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I read the synopsis. It sounds...interesting. Can't wait to read your review.


message 27: by Lynn (new)

Lynn Reynolds (lynnreynolds) Two very recent books that I think are very gothic in their mood and atmosphere are The Thirteenth Tale and The Little Stranger. They definitely have the creepy house, slightly supernatural goings-on and other Gothic elements.

Rebecca would probably be my favorite older book in this category. I've never heard of Zofloya. I'll have to check that one out.


message 28: by Mohammed (new)

Mohammed  Abdikhader  Firdhiye  (mohammedaosman) | 122 comments Best examples i have read are:

Dr Hyde and Mr Jekyll by Robert Louis Stevenson
The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson
On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers


message 29: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson
On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers

new to me--thank you!


message 30: by Mohammed (new)

Mohammed  Abdikhader  Firdhiye  (mohammedaosman) | 122 comments William Hope Hodgson is one of the grand men, classic authors of horror ;)

Admired by Lovecraft and co. Read supernatural horror essay by Lovecraft, he mentions all important classic names. From Le Fanu,Machen to Hodgson.


message 31: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I am a big fan of Hodgson, which you probably know, Mohammed.


message 32: by Mohammed (new)

Mohammed  Abdikhader  Firdhiye  (mohammedaosman) | 122 comments Yeah you have good taste in horror ;)

One of the authors i miss reading most is Hodgson. I dream about his collections seriously!


message 33: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Thanks! He definitely knows how to spin a tale.


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