Showing posts with label gothic novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gothic novel. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

My Cousin Rachel/ Daphne du Maurier / 400 pgs

I've always meant to read something by Daphne du Maurier, an acclaimed English writer of suspense novels with Gothic elements. When I heard that My Cousin Rachel was being made into a movie, I decided to read the book first. Published in the early 1950s, the novel is set in Cornwall but the time is indeterminate. The characters travel by horseback and carriage, so I would assume 19th century. The story is told entirely from the point of view of Philip Ashley, a twenty-four-old who is essentially a Gothic heroine in a man's body. He's naïve and emotionally malleable and I loved seeing this trope turned on its head.

Philip was orphaned at a young age and taken in by an older cousin, Ambrose. Ambrose owns an estate on which he raises Philip in an entirely masculine and misogynistic atmosphere (no female servants). However, once Philip is grown, Ambrose suffers from an unnamed illness which forces him to spend the winter in warmer, dryer Italy. One year, Ambrose writes back to Philip that he's met a distant cousin of theirs, Rachel. Before long, bachelor-for-life Ambrose has married Rachel in a surprise move. Then tragedy strikes and Ambrose dies unexpectedly after writing some cryptic and incriminating letters to Philip. Philip suspects Rachel of playing a part in Ambrose's death and he creates a picture of her in his mind of an ugly, mean-spirited shrew. Then Rachel comes to England and Philip is lost to her charm, beauty, and femininity. The rest of the story plays out with Philip's emotions and feelings toward Rachel zigzagging here, there, and everywhere.

I loved du Maurier's evocative writing and the way she could have a character say something simple and yet multiple meanings lay beneath those words. You won't get a definitive account of what actually happened in Italy with Ambrose but the journey is interesting nonetheless and the ending surprised me.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Heroes Are My Weakness / Susan Elizabeth Phillips 367 p.


Heroes Are My Weakness / Susan Elizabeth Phillips 367 p.

Annie Hewitt is down to her last dollar.  She an down-and-out character actress.  Kid's puppet shows, coffee shop waitress, and dog walker cannot pay her bills.  She desperately needs the inheritance her mother left her at Moonraker Cottage.   According to her mother's contract, she must stay on Peregrine Island two months a year or forfeit the cottage.  Peregrine Island is where horror writer Theo Harp lives.  The man who turned against her and almost caused her death when they were teenagers.  Now she must live in the shadow of Harp House on an frozen island along with a widow who murdered her abusive husband, a mute little girl, and islanders who cannot leave things alone.   Then someone is ransacking her cottage, shooting at her, and playing tricks.  What's going on?  And is this the time of romance??????

Friday, July 27, 2012

Frost/Marianna Baer/396 pages

Leena is excited about her senior year at boarding school. She and two of her best friends are moving into a cool dorm on the outskirts of campus. It's an old house that is usually reserved for senior boys, but she convinced the Dean of Students to let her and her friends have it. She's supposed to have the downstairs room to herself the first semester and then share the room with a fourth friend when she returns from study abroad. But her plan changes when the Dean assigns Celeste to the dorm for the semester. Celeste broke her leg right before school started and is on crutches, so she needs a first floor dorm room. Celeste is loner who enjoys drama in her life. Her brother, David, has transferred to the school as well. Right away, Celeste claims strange things are happening in the room. Added to that is vandalism, nightmares and unexplained bruises. Leena is also dealing with some weirdness with the room, but in her case, she finds the room welcoming and safe. She has an unhealthy obsession with the closet.

This book was definitely a page turner. Quite a good Gothic suspense novel. However, I was disappointed in the ending. I thought I had the "twist" figured out, but there wasn't really a twist at all. I think there is more story there to tell, especially with Leena's state of mind, but if you can't tell that in 400 pages, then maybe you save that for another book. Fine debut novel.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

THE HOUSE AT RIVERTON by Kate Morton - 473 Pages

Book Discussion title at McClay Branch

The House at Riverton by Kate Morton is a Gothic novel...told by 90 year "Grace" who began her life in said house as a serving girl. When the story opens Grace is meeting with Ursula who is making a movie about the "suicide" which occurred there years before. Since Grace was in residence the night of the tragedy Ursula wants to interview her as well as get Grace's "take" on the sets. From there we journey back in Grace memories....her Mother's presence in her life...stern, unaffectionate but as best as she could took care of Grace., Grace's own daughter Ruth with whom she has no better relationship than she had with her own Mother.

We get a bird's eye view into the residents of the House at Riverton...the serving staff, caring, warm, a well oiled machine who had "serving" down pat yet who truly cared about not only the lords and ladies of the manner but especially about the rest of the staff who served. We see Grace become mesmerized by Hannah and her sister Emmeline who had "soo much life" about them. Grace feels a special connection to Hannah especially all her life....until the day of Hannah's death. We learn the true story of the "suicide" of Robbie Hunter and like a game of chess...all the pieces fall together to make a tragic but well written ending if a touch unbelievable (my take only!)

Many rabbit trails there are to go down from mother/daughter relationships, WWI with its rationing, the privilege and responsibility of wealth, to the unfairness of life, lost love, being but a few.

As is true of all Gothic novels there is dark side Morton creates which permeates the entire book. Some of her quotes are priceless:

"There's nothing spoils a young lady's loveliness so much as impertinence of intellect."

"...for home is a magnet that lures back even its most abstracted children."

"Photographs force us to see people before their future weighed them down, before they knew their endings."

and one of my own personal favorites: "reading is one of life's great pleasures;talking about books keeps their worlds alive for longer."

The gals gave the book a 2 out of five...with 1 being the best...majority rule.

Ruth - MY Book Club

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Rebecca/Daphne Du Maurier/380 pgs.

This is our August book club read, and since I had never read this "classic," I was looking forward to it. Maybe I was expecting too much, but it's not one of my favorites. One of my co-workers had to read it in high school, and loved it. I had to read Jane Eyre in high school, and loved it--if I had read Jane Eyre for the first time at this time of my life, I might have been disappointed in it, too. I had a difficult time remembering that Rebecca was written around 1938, and as such, I found the "new" Mrs. de Winter a wimp, and Maxim a boring, chauvinistic pig (not to mention way too old and worldly for her). I realize that their personalities reflect the time period in which the book was written, but it was still hard to swallow. The last 50 pages of the book were the best part--and never knowing Mrs. de Winter's first name was aggravating! (for lp--imho)