Category Archives: books

Presenting: The Parade’s End read-along!

This will be a fandom-friendly* read-along of the Ford Madox Ford tetralogy, spanning several months, in anticipation of the (as-yet-undated) airing of Parade’s End, written by Tom Stoppard, directed by Susanna White, and starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Rebecca Hall. When: The read-along will begin on February 1, 2012.  At that time, we’ll publish a schedule guide for each [...]

A detective on Christmas: Dorothy L. Sayers’s Strong Poison

I blogged about a Christmas film noir, but I didn’t actually mean to read a Christmas detective story as well.  But Dorothy L. Sayers’s Strong Poison was calling out to me from the shelf where I’d stuck it, just above a collection of Poe’s mystery stories.  I actually bought the book several years ago in Atlanta, [...]

Read this! Innogen and the Hungry Half

Georgia Shakespeare’s Cymbeline, 2004 The beauty of vacation is getting to catch up on all the reading one has missed during the semester.  Usually that means the stacks of books piling up around my room, but currently, I’m falling madly in love with an ongoing online serial novella that I just have to take a [...]

Orlando & the frivolous necessity of making the home

I’m not actually writing about Orlando for my Woolf paper on the plastic arts and narratology, but I do keep coming back to this moment in the novel: Never had the house looked more noble and humane. Why, then, had he wished to raise himself above them? For it seemed vain and arrogant in the [...]

Virginia Woolf’s brown stocking

I’m currently in the research stages of a paper on Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse and the narratological metaphors of painting and knitting.  I have a long way to go before arriving at a solid argument, but the idea was inspired by a conviction that Mrs. Ramsey’s knitting is more important than previous critics have [...]

TFL: Henry James and Haunted Hotels

Over at The Film League, I briefly blogged about Henry James’s short story “The Jolly Corner,” which I read as an eerie prelude to our October film, The Shining. In the story, Spencer Brydon has just returned to New York after 33 years abroad.  He is there to deal with some property, including a large [...]

Depravity in the Quaker City: George Lippard’s Monks of Monk Hall

George Lippard’s The Quaker City; Of The Monks of Monk-Hall is a strange and lurid entry into the subgenre of Philadelphia Gothic.  It is, in part, an homage to Matthew Gregory Lewis’s 1796 Gothic novel The Monk: A Romance.  Lippard does his damnedest to out-shock readers of it and other controversial, graphic, and even offensive novels [...]

The City as Labyrinth: Brown’s Arthur Mervyn

If we’re talking Philadelphia Gothic, we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention Charles Brockden Brown’s other 1799 novel, Arthur Mervyn.  While Edgar Huntly skirts the city boundaries, this one plunges you right into the nightmare of its urban setting.  Philadelphia becomes a labyrinth of terror as an outbreak of yellow fever spreads among the inhabitants. Brown knows [...]

In the Gothic Wilds of Pennsylvania: Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly

Charles Brockden Brown is not only one of Philadelphia’s own, but also widely considered the most accomplished early American novelist.  Born into a Philadelphia Quaker family, Brown wrote several Gothic works set in and around the city.  The book I’ll look at next week takes place in the city proper; this week’s book, Edgar Huntly, [...]

Welcome to October

October just might be my favorite month of the year.  The heat of summer has broken, but the snows haven’t arrived, and most importantly, Halloween is on its way. Sometime around 2007, I started dedicating October to spooky books and movies, reveling in Gothic storytelling and all things haunted.  I love a good slasher movie, [...]