I was excited to read this one for the Readers Imbibing Peril challenge. The short stories in here include work by Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, and Wilkie Collins, some of my favorite authors ever, and, judging by the title, it fits the challenge perfectly.
The Haunted House is a collection of works first commissioned by Dickens for one of his famous Christmas annuals, this one for All Year Round. It has work by Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell), and by lesser-known (to me, anyway) authors Hesba Stretton, George Agustus Sala, and Adelaide Anne Proctor. Promising!
It didn't quite fulfill my hopes. For one thing, it is not really RIP material. The frame story establishes early that the house isn't really haunted. The "ghosts" the guests face are those of memory or make-believe and fairly benign.
The stories also failed to live up to my literary expectations which were, as I said, high. Consider: Collins is the author of Moonstone and Woman in White, two books I cannot rave enough about. His other books don't move me to raving, but I've still enjoyed them. Dickens inevitably manages to suck me into his stories, even when I want to remain aloof (Esther in Bleak House irritates me to no end. Does this stop me from getting drawn in? It does not.) Gaskell wrote Cranford, another of my favorite books. I didn't know the other authors, but was willing to meet new winners. But... not here. Of the authors, only Colllins troubles to make his tale at all suspenseful. George Augustus Sala writes a humorous dream tale that failed to amuse. The others were lackluster to irritating. Hesba Stretton wrote a "frivolous woman reformed" tale that had me gritting my teeth (Victorian literature is full of such tales, and they are often irritating). Gaskell's tale of the judge haunted by a long ago choice was the only one that at all deserved the epitaph "haunting."
Conclusion? Read something else by Dickens, Collins, or Gaskell and give this a miss.
Books, bugs, and birds are constant parts of the blog. Gardening shows up a lot, so do books on gardening.
Showing posts with label Readers Imbibing Peril. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Readers Imbibing Peril. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Dracula by Bram Stoker: A Book Review
The Readers Imbibing Peril challenge gave me the extra incentive to reread Dracula. As I mentioned before, it reminded me how much I enjoy Victorian novels.
I'm not going to give a summary; I think most people are familiar with the basic premise, or even much of a "review" as such. Dracula is so much a part of popular and literary culture that it is hard to stand aside and view it objectively; there's too much wound around it. I will say, though, that I don't think it is, on its own, the best Victorian novel. If you want to read one and only one Victorian work for Readers Imbibing Peril, I'd suggest Woman in White.
Instead, I'll mention a couple of things that particularly struck me this read through.
It's a novel about communication and information. The protagonists are determined to record every event. Even before Dracula appears on the scene, Mina is keeping her nightly journal as a discipline and Lucy strives to emulate her. The men, too, keep their records; Seward has his phonograph and Harker his journal. They also collect every scrap of record they can find about Dracula; the novel has several newspaper clippings included. Ultimately, they hope the records will help track the count, and he seems to share that fear since he burns the original clippings and journals, leaving them only the copies. Yet, for all their insistence on sharing, with Mina distributing multiple copies of everyone's work, they singularly fail to communicate at crucial points and that leads to Lucy's death (and undeath) and very nearly dooms Mina to the same fate.
Most of this is due to Van Helsing, the "good doctor," whom I wanted, more than ever, to shake. It's his idea that knowledge has to be planted like corn and left hidden for a while, unrevealed (To paraphrase a very long, elaborate, and ornate explanation) that dooms Lucy, several times over. Granted, he's not in a position right away to say "I'm looking for vampires," but he fails to tell Seward what sort of intruder he's guarding against, and the result is Seward has no idea that he should be awake and in the same room as she is. He strictly forbids anyone to tell Lucy's mother the purpose of the garlic flowers, so of course the woman throws the flowers out (Garlic is all very well in a dish, but a roomful of flowers? One can only imagine the stench!), and so it goes. Mina is nearly the victim of the same secrecy; it is Van Helsing who tells the men that she must no longer be a part of their councils, so she is cut out of the information exchange, and no one notices her growing lethargy as the count switches his attentions to her--not until it is almost too late. The strange thing is, the book gives no evidence of uneasiness with this, no sense that perhaps the "good doctor," whom the characters all admire and reverence, is part of the problem.
There's a strange discordance between science and superstition as well, but this is clearly something the characters and author are aware of. On the one hand, the characters use all the modern devices--typewriters, phonographs, steamships, railways--in their fight against the count, but at the same time, their ultimate weapons--garlic, the crucifix, the wooden stake--come straight out of old folklore (some of which Stoker invented), and the Count's invasion is made possible by the modern banking and shipping techniques. Ultimately, the battle between science and superstition must, I think, be declared a draw.
A side note: I read the Norton Critical Edition which highlighted the difficulty of footnotes. On the one hand, they're handy. They give extra bits of information. They point critical moments out. And, in this edition, they are footnotes, not endnotes. At the same time, I found myself wondering, as I have before, whether or not I might have noticed these things on my own, and wouldn't it have been more fun if I had? Ah well. I suppose I will always have a love-hate with extra-textual information.
I did enjoy the contemporary reviews reprinted at the back of the book.
I'm not going to give a summary; I think most people are familiar with the basic premise, or even much of a "review" as such. Dracula is so much a part of popular and literary culture that it is hard to stand aside and view it objectively; there's too much wound around it. I will say, though, that I don't think it is, on its own, the best Victorian novel. If you want to read one and only one Victorian work for Readers Imbibing Peril, I'd suggest Woman in White.
Instead, I'll mention a couple of things that particularly struck me this read through.
It's a novel about communication and information. The protagonists are determined to record every event. Even before Dracula appears on the scene, Mina is keeping her nightly journal as a discipline and Lucy strives to emulate her. The men, too, keep their records; Seward has his phonograph and Harker his journal. They also collect every scrap of record they can find about Dracula; the novel has several newspaper clippings included. Ultimately, they hope the records will help track the count, and he seems to share that fear since he burns the original clippings and journals, leaving them only the copies. Yet, for all their insistence on sharing, with Mina distributing multiple copies of everyone's work, they singularly fail to communicate at crucial points and that leads to Lucy's death (and undeath) and very nearly dooms Mina to the same fate.
Most of this is due to Van Helsing, the "good doctor," whom I wanted, more than ever, to shake. It's his idea that knowledge has to be planted like corn and left hidden for a while, unrevealed (To paraphrase a very long, elaborate, and ornate explanation) that dooms Lucy, several times over. Granted, he's not in a position right away to say "I'm looking for vampires," but he fails to tell Seward what sort of intruder he's guarding against, and the result is Seward has no idea that he should be awake and in the same room as she is. He strictly forbids anyone to tell Lucy's mother the purpose of the garlic flowers, so of course the woman throws the flowers out (Garlic is all very well in a dish, but a roomful of flowers? One can only imagine the stench!), and so it goes. Mina is nearly the victim of the same secrecy; it is Van Helsing who tells the men that she must no longer be a part of their councils, so she is cut out of the information exchange, and no one notices her growing lethargy as the count switches his attentions to her--not until it is almost too late. The strange thing is, the book gives no evidence of uneasiness with this, no sense that perhaps the "good doctor," whom the characters all admire and reverence, is part of the problem.
There's a strange discordance between science and superstition as well, but this is clearly something the characters and author are aware of. On the one hand, the characters use all the modern devices--typewriters, phonographs, steamships, railways--in their fight against the count, but at the same time, their ultimate weapons--garlic, the crucifix, the wooden stake--come straight out of old folklore (some of which Stoker invented), and the Count's invasion is made possible by the modern banking and shipping techniques. Ultimately, the battle between science and superstition must, I think, be declared a draw.
A side note: I read the Norton Critical Edition which highlighted the difficulty of footnotes. On the one hand, they're handy. They give extra bits of information. They point critical moments out. And, in this edition, they are footnotes, not endnotes. At the same time, I found myself wondering, as I have before, whether or not I might have noticed these things on my own, and wouldn't it have been more fun if I had? Ah well. I suppose I will always have a love-hate with extra-textual information.
I did enjoy the contemporary reviews reprinted at the back of the book.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Rereaing Dracula--Some meandering about the Victorian Novel
The Readers Imbibing Peril challenge finally made me move from vaguely wanting to reread Dracula to actually doing so. I've only just started, so I've no business writing, really, but the beginning made me realize all over again how much I love Victorian novels. Novels generally, yes, but there's something special about the Victorians. Right now, Jonathan Harker has just begun his journey to Dracula's castle. He's busy writing in his journal describing the clothes everyone is wearing, the food at the inn, the strange scenery outside the windows. He's even got a polyglot dictionary so he can check what people are saying and in what languages.
Sometimes, I know, people find the detail excessive, sometimes I find the detail excessive, but all the same, I love the Victorians and the great care they take in world building. There's Dickens trying to shove all of London into Bleak House and then, having worked at that, moving out into the English countryside and trying to cram that in as well. There's George Eliot stuffing an entire village into Middlemarch, overwhelming the reader with the richness of detail, Elizabeth Gaskell lingering lovingly over tiny details of life in Cranford or overseeing the housekeeping in Mary Barton. And, yes, Bram Stoker making sure we know exactly how his monster managed travel arrangements.
I have some more Gothic literature lined up for the RIP challenge, including some 18th century stuff (Those novelists really love their detail!), but I think after this I may have to go on a Victorian rampage.
And this blog entry was going to go somewhere very intelligent (maybe), but it's late, and I'll just stop here and say "Hurray for the Victorians!" and get some sleep.
Never fear, there shall be a more orderly review of Dracula later.
Incidentally, I'm hopscotching between the 1997 Norton Critical Edition (I love the footnotes) and Librivox, version2 (Different readers for the different parts). If anyone has comments or recommendations on versions, I'm interested.
Sometimes, I know, people find the detail excessive, sometimes I find the detail excessive, but all the same, I love the Victorians and the great care they take in world building. There's Dickens trying to shove all of London into Bleak House and then, having worked at that, moving out into the English countryside and trying to cram that in as well. There's George Eliot stuffing an entire village into Middlemarch, overwhelming the reader with the richness of detail, Elizabeth Gaskell lingering lovingly over tiny details of life in Cranford or overseeing the housekeeping in Mary Barton. And, yes, Bram Stoker making sure we know exactly how his monster managed travel arrangements.
I have some more Gothic literature lined up for the RIP challenge, including some 18th century stuff (Those novelists really love their detail!), but I think after this I may have to go on a Victorian rampage.
And this blog entry was going to go somewhere very intelligent (maybe), but it's late, and I'll just stop here and say "Hurray for the Victorians!" and get some sleep.
Never fear, there shall be a more orderly review of Dracula later.
Incidentally, I'm hopscotching between the 1997 Norton Critical Edition (I love the footnotes) and Librivox, version2 (Different readers for the different parts). If anyone has comments or recommendations on versions, I'm interested.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Readers Imbibing Peril--another challenge.
Well, Jenny's done it again--started me off on another blog challenge. She's not the host, this time; the Readers Imbibing Peril challenge is over at Stainless Steel Droppings. The challenge runs from September 1st through October 31st and the plan is to
Anyway, I do suggest going and reading up on the challenge yourself.
"celebrate and share... love of the elements of gothic fiction"by reading and reviewing
Mystery.And, of course, to have fun. There are several levels of challenge, and I have not decided yet what level I'll be aiming for, myself. I do know that I want to reread Dracula, and I suspect that at least one of these free audio book sites will have it, so I can double the fun--reacquainting myself with the book and trying a new site. Oh, and I have a couple actual Gothic gothic novels I want to read or reread--I haven't read The Monk in ages, and while I am pretty sure I read The Romance of the Forest (I wanted to see what Harriet was talking about in Emma), and I have a very nice copy sitting on my shelf, I don't remember it at all, so that's on my "maybe" list. Otherwise, we'll see.
Suspense.
Thriller.
Dark Fantasy.
Gothic.
Horror.
Supernatural.
Anyway, I do suggest going and reading up on the challenge yourself.
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