Showing posts with label Woolf - Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woolf - Virginia. Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2022

Haunted Tales Edited by Lisa Morton and Leslie S. Klinger

 


Do you have a favorite ghost story, book, movie, or character?  I used to love Caspar the friendly ghost when I was growing up.  We are currently watching the show Ghosts on Paramount Plus.  My favorite ghost story is probably the Turn of the Screw by Henry James.

I was happy to be able to review Haunted Tales, Edited by Lisa Morton and Leslie S. Klinger.  It is a perfect book for the season.  It is a great collection of “classic stories of ghosts and the supernatural.”  The book starts with an interesting introduction by editors Lisa Morton and Leslie S. Klinger.  It discusses how the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century also brought about mass murder.  The Napoleonic wars killed more than four million people.  Those left behind were looking for new ways to communicate with their loved ones.  Ghost stories became a popular genre.  They were found in popular magazines and were especially popular at Christmas time, for example the spirits in A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. They were published all year round though and not just for holidays.

I loved how this anthology included stories from well-known authors such as Oscar Wilde, Rudyard Kipling, H.G. Wells, and Virginia Woolf, but I loved even more that it included stories from authors that were popular in the nineteenth and early twentieth century but aren’t as well read now.  At the start of each story, there was a biography of the author. I like the biographies as much as the stories.  There were great footnotes throughout the stories to fill in the historical references. 

I found the stories to be fascinating and spooky.  They gave gothic vibes which would thrill Catherine Morland from Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.  All of these stories were new to me, and I was happy to finally read “The Canterville Ghost by Oscar Wilde”.  I have to admit, “The Canterville Ghost” was my absolute favorite story in this collection.  It was both hilarious and heartwarming.  It was also beautifully written.  The Canterville Ghost is pretty proud of all of his shenanigans through the years, but when an American Minister and his family move into the estate, he can’t seem to scare them.  Worse still, the young twin sons start to terrify the ghost.  It is the daughter of the family though who really figures out the mystery of the Canterville Ghost.  I thought “They” by Rudyard Kipling was a poignant story especially knowing from the bio at the start of the story that he had lost his own young child. 

I also enjoyed the Gothic splendor of “The Cold Embrace” by Mary Elizabeth Braddon.  “He was an artist – such things as happened to him happen sometimes to artists.  He was a German – such things as happened to him happen sometimes to Germans.  He was young, handsome, studious, enthusiastic, metaphysical, reckless, unbelieving, heartless.  And being young, handsome and eloquent, he was beloved.”  He loves his cousin Gertrude, and she loves him.  They promise to devote each other until death, but while his love strays, Gertrude’s remains even after death. 

One last story call out was “M. Anastasius” by Dinah Mulock.  Charles Dickens himself thought it was the best ghost story ever written.  I enjoyed it.  It was also Gothic and haunting about two young lovers that are haunted by the ghost of the young woman’s guardian who was lost at sea. 

I loved in the notes for “The Canterville Ghost” that it discussed that the phrase in this story “England and America are two countries divided a common language” was first seen in this story although it is commonly attributed to George Bernard Shaw.  I had just seen this elsewhere lately attributed to Shaw and I thought this was interesting information.

I highly recommend this collection for lovers of all spooky tales!

Review Copy from Pegasus Books.  Thank-you! I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Friday, May 9, 2014

Classic Women’s Short Stories by Katherine Mansfield, Kate Chopin, Virginia Woolf

Title: Classic Women’s Short Stories
Author: Katherine Mansfield, Kate Chopin, Virginia Woolf
Read by:  Carole Boyd, Lisa Ross, Teresa Gallagher
Publisher: Naxos Audiobooks
Length: 2 hours, 41 minutes
Source:  MP3 Audio through Wisconsin Public Library Consortium – Overdrive on my Droid

This digital audiobook contained four short stories that were nicely bracketed by classical music.  Honestly my favorite of the four stories was “The Garden Party” by Katherine Mansfield.  A well-to do family in the early twentieth century is preparing for a garden party when they hear that a workman was killed in front of their house the very morning of the party.  Daughter Laura suddenly becomes socially aware of the world outside of her family and its garden party and wants to cancel the event out of respect.

“The Mark on the Wall” by Virginia Woolf is one woman’s stream of consciousness thought on a mark her wall and the meaning behind it.  It was different, but I didn’t find it that compelling.  “The Daughters of the Late Colonel” by Katherine Mansfield is the story of two middle-aged women without the ruling influence of their domineering father and at a loss on how to proceed. It was interesting.  Kate Chopin's "Ma'ame Pelagie” is about two daughters in the south not being able to let go of their dreams of their family grander coming back after the Civil War as the years melt by and they become old women.  I was not inspired by the tale.  I wanted to smack the women and tell them to buck up and move on with their lives.

The narrators were all good and I especially loved the classical music between the stories.  Overall these Classic Women’s Short Stories were all interesting, but I especially enjoyed The Garden Party by Katherine Mansfield.