Tag Archives: gothic

Del Toro and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: A Gothic Triumph

 A Gothic Triumph

November 2026

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus is a Gothic triumph and continues to be over 200 years later. Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation of this masterpiece might be considered his best film (I loved it in many ways), but the adaptation is a disappointment because it does not remain faithful to Mary’s story.

For the book purists who have read and re-read the novel (as I have), the film is more of a reinvention or even a modernization of the madly ambitious Victor and his creature. The film might rightly be termed redefined Gothic horror.

I couldn’t help but see stark differences between the book and film.

In the film, the benefactor Henrich Harlander is a new character who has his own selfish agenda with Victor. Okay, I’m good with that intrigue. In the novel, Henry Clerval is Victor’s endearing friend, and I did miss that relationship being deleted from the film. Justine is another character with her own compelling story (murder, trial, and execution) eliminated that I missed.

Mary portrayed Victor’s father as a kindly, intelligent gentleman exhibiting sympathy and family love, not the authoritarian abuser in the film. While this creative liberty added a layer to the film’s backstory tension, I was not fond of making Victor’s father so odious as to be completely opposite of the character Mary had designed.

The most radical change in the film is the subplot of Victor’s younger brother William (a child throughout the novel) and Henrich’s niece  Elizabeth (in the novel, she is Victor’s adopted sister and romantic interest). Del Toro completely fabricates this new storyline into a romance between William, a grown man, with the lust-worthy Elizabeth. William and Elizabeth are engaged and then marry.

Elizabeth has her own questionable intentions. She provokes a seductive triangle between William, Victor, and the creature. And while this action is well nested into the plot, I thought it came off messy and inappropriate, especially because the novel’s Elizabeth is innocent and endearing, devoted to Victor, and marries him. Del Toro’s Elizabeth is completely contrary to Mary’s Elizabeth.

There are a number of other changes, which I won’t identify here so as not to create spoilers. The endings are vastly different. Mary’s story ends in deep darkness, despair, and distance, while the film ties it all up too neatly beneath tarnished sunlight.

Did I enjoy the film? Yes, it’s a cinematic feast of mystery, madness,  passion, and obsession: a panoramic dazzle with lush scenes, magnificent costuming, and vast landscapes in Gothic beauty and desolation.  Yes, there are lots of criticisms of the computer-generated images (the wolves scene for sure), but I’m not offended by cinematic liberties when they are done well. In all of the 2 hours and 29 minutes, I was never bored or distracted watching this juicy spectacle.

I must say, though, read Mary’s novel for sure! Her story is a brilliant weave of intimate perspectives. Her fine prose streams with meaning that only literature can reveal.  You will explore deep psychological themes of arrogance, ambition, isolation, love, death, loss, and destruction. The symbolism in her lyrical narrative is not to be missed.

Mary began the story from a “fever dream” in 1816 and completed the manuscript a year later in 1817.

The first edition of Frankenstein was published anonymously in 1818 because Mary’s publisher said no one would buy a novel written by a woman. The book earned no royalties and didn’t achieve fame until after the second edition.  https://www.amazon.com/Frankenstein-1818-Text-Penguin-Classics/dp/0143131842

 

In 1823, her name appears on the second edition.

 

In the Introduction of the 1831 revised edition, Mary writes about the dream that inspired her to write Frankenstein, while in Geneva.

Night waned. “I saw—with shut eyes, but acute mental vision,—I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world. His success would terrify the artist; he would rush away from his odious handywork, horror-stricken. He would hope that, left to itself, the slight spark of life which he had communicated would fade; that this thing, which had received such imperfect animation, would subside into dead matter; and he might sleep in the belief that the silence of the grave would quench for ever the transient existence of the hideous corpse which he had looked upon as the cradle of life. He sleeps; but he is awakened; he opens his eyes; behold the horrid thing stands at his bedside, opening his curtains, and looking on him with yellow, watery, but speculative eyes.”

The full text is in the public domain at Gutenberg.org https://www.gutenberg.org/files/42324/42324-h/42324-h.htm

I highly recommend Mary’s Monster, Love, Madness, and How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein by Lita Judge. This is her biography in verse. “Darkly evocative . . . Brings life to Mary Shelley’s story the way that Shelley herself breathed life into her novel of a scientist who animates a corpse.” ―Kirkus Reviews.

 

 

I can also personally recommend Mary’s novella, Matilda, which is heart-wrenching as it is extraordinary in art and language. This book, written in 1819, was published posthumously in 1959 because Mary’s father hid it for years. When you read this 100-page story, you’ll know why.

The opening of the story sets the mood of a young woman contemplating suicide.

“It is only four o’clock; but it is winter and the sun has already set: there are no clouds in the clear, frosty sky to reflect its slant beams, but the air itself is tinged with a slight roseate colour which is again reflected on the snow that covers the ground.”

Matilda will haunt you long after you close the book.

 

 

Thank you for stopping by! Please leave a comment. I would very much like to know your thoughts about Frankenstein and Mary Shelley.

 

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Draakensky, On Sale Today!

Introducing . . .

Draakensky, A Supernatural Tale of Magick and Romance

 

On sale today on Amazon.

 

A murder.    A wind sorcerer.    A dark spirit.

On Draakensky, magick dictates destiny.

 

 

 

Reviews

“Cappa is a skilled craftsman. This is a sturdy, old-fashioned Gothic thriller, thoroughly charming in its atmosphere and invention and anchored by a fully dimensional heroine in the vein of Mrs. de Winter or Jane Eyre.”—Boze Herrington, US Review of Books

“A novel steeped in the rich dual attractions of Gothic romance and ghosts. Paula Cappa does an excellent job of injecting atmospheric intrigue with a literary descriptive voice that is alluring. Charlotte ventures into heady waters of transformation and spirit-driven encounters. Exceptional. Unpredictability and twists.”Midwest Book Review, D. Donovan

Spine-tingling, atmospheric mystery. Recommended.San Diego Book Review

“Paula Cappa’s Draakensky is a gorgeous, gothic novel that has all the potential to become a modern classic. Dripping with dark, delicious prose and packed with sinful secrets and intricate lore, the pages crackle with magick and chemistry, as the reader is lured into a world of danger, passion, and intrigue. One of the must have literary supernatural novels of 2024, Cappa delivers on every front.”Stephen Black, author of The Famine Witch and The Kirkwood Scott Chronicles.

“Draakensky is an immersive novel weaving magic and romance into a tapestry of fantasy, poetry, and horror. This is a rollercoaster ride of emotions, so buckle up, and prepare yourself—but don’t close your eyes, as there is so much to see. I’m a big fan of Paula Cappa’s work.”—Richard Thomas, author of Spontaneous Human Combustion, Bram Stoker Award Finalist.

Crystal Lake Publishing

 

On Amazon.com

Dear Friends,

Thank you to all my readers and followers here at Reading Fiction Blog for your support and fellowship in our literature endeavors. Draakensky’s five years of research, study, and creative writing have produced my fourth novel, which I offer to you today for your reading pleasure.

The poet Rainer Maria Rilke says in his The Book of Hours, “the darkness embraces everything.”  In Draakensky, there is a darkness. There is also magickal light. If you love to read about the mysterious forces of nature, the power of love and desire, come join Charlotte Knight and Marc Sexton in their adventure on Draakensky Windmill Estate.

Draakensky Windmill Estate, The Mianus River, Bedford, New York

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

 

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Lacrimosa by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Author of the Month

Lacrimosa, A Short Story

Silvia Moreno-Garacia Author of the Month

September 17, 2024

If you’ve not read Nightmare Magazine and you are a horror reader, I have a short story for you, free to read, at their website, Lacrimosa. By September’s Author of the Month, Silvia Moreno-Garcia.

This story is a reflection of the Mexican Medea, Llorona, a mother who drowns her children in a river, then wanders the town with haunting cries in her search for them. This short fiction is sure to grab you and is a quick read.

“Everyone in town had a story about the Llorona . . . ”

Read  it  free (2400 words) at Nightmare Magazine link, Lacrimosa:

Lacrimosa

 

Moreno-Garcia is a Mexican and Canadian novelist, short story writer, editor, and publisher. She is author of The Seventh Veil of Salome, The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, Mexican Gothic, Gods of Jade and Shadow, and many others. She serves as publisher of Innsmouth Free Press, an imprint devoted to weird fiction, and is a columnist for the Washington Post. Among her many literary awards are the Locus, British Fantasy, World Fantasy, Sunburst, and Aurora awards.

“Thematically, I like to write quiet stories. I’m not a bang-bang kind of writer. I love, love Shirley Jackson. Stuff that is slow and builds up layer by layer.”

“I am partial to quiet, slow, psychologically intricate work.”

“I wasn’t very much interested in what is called gothic romance or a female gothic. I was always more into what is termed the male gothic, which is gothic books that have supernatural elements, graphic violence, and that kind of stuff. Sometimes we also call it gothic horror, as opposed to what we consider to be the female gothic, which is more like Scooby-Doo types of stories. Jane Eyre kinds of tales, in which a young woman goes to a distant location, meets some dude, and then there’s some kind of mystery to unravel. There is a happy ending — that is mostly the desire of that kind of story…It’s a liminal category, the gothic, and this is one side of it. But I was always more into the horror gothic. Into the Draculas of the world and the Carmillas.” From Vox interview 2020.

“When I was a kid, I read a collection of short stories by Edgar Allan Poe, and it was my introduction to horror literature. Through Poe, I met H.P. Lovecraft, and I had such a longstanding relationship with his work that I went on to edit anthologies inspired by his stories and do a master’s degree that looked at eugenics and his writing.”

At Pen.org, they asked Moreno-Garcia . . . Can you speak briefly about the craft behind the suspense created in Mexican Gothic? How did you find its voice? Did the plot or characters come first? What was your experience in balancing the novel’s pace?  “I had a 70/30 rule. For 70 percent of the book, things would go a bit slow and quiet, and then at the last 30 percent, all hell would break lose. I wanted that for two reasons. First, if you’ve ever gone into a haunted house, the person dressed as a monster doesn’t jump out at you when you walk in. You go through a couple of rooms, you see some skeletons and coffins, and then the person in the mask yells, “Boo!” You can’t create something suspenseful by dangling a ghost on every other page.”

 

 

Book Review

Recently I read Mexican Gothic. This is dark, darkest, fiction.  Mexican Gothic dives into the sinister and monstrous side of human nature.  I sunk into Moreno-Garcia’s ghostly and threatening world, turning the pages with great anticipation. Noemi is an alluring character, strong, savvy, a drinker, smoker, fashionably coy and oh so smarty, who becomes another doomed victim of “the house,” High Place, set in the Mexican countryside. Here fog, rain, and mist become the achromatic beastly gray ghost permeating the house that rules mind, soul, and destiny.

Horror fans will love the wickedly ghoulish patriarch of the family, Howard Doyle, and his handsome son Virgil who is nerve-shaking sexy; we are sure he’s likely to take Noemi lustfully at any moment, a play of chemistry between their opposing forces. Chills, thrills, brilliantly dark, twisted, and well-written.

Visit Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s website: https://silviamoreno-garcia.com/

The Reading Public Library will host a virtual event with Silvia Moreno-Garcia this October 9,  2024, 7 pm Eastern Time https://libraryc.org/readingpl/58134

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Midnight Magick, Draakensky, Chapter 28

Midnight Magick     2024

In the realms of magick, and there are many on Draakensky, there is owl magick, river magick too, and tree magick. You might even find sky magick when the haunted winds thrust storm clouds to magnify your thoughts with the hot lightning and the thundering pulses.

And there is midnight magick when one can make a voyage into sex magick. Pleasure energies. Sex magick is a spiritual endeavor, fuel for the mind-body bliss. A deep sexual awakening into magickal waves and secret paths.

Are there conjured spiritual allies in this brave act?

Ask Charlotte Knight, an illustrator and new resident of Draakensky Windmill Estate. Here, Charlotte meets Marc Sexton of Bedford, becomes captivated by his charms and strengths and intrigued by his Otherworldly knowledge—this man who believes in love affairs and practices midnight magick.

Charlotte is thinking . . .

“I’m troubled—who is this man, Marc Sexton of Bedford, New York? He wears a silver wolf amulet around his neck. The seductive magick inside his body is powerful.

Shall I resist? Or let Marc’s magic in?”

 

Marc is deciding . . .

“I’m thinking—this woman Charlotte Knight of Draakensky. She fears my magick. Does she sense the secret power of my nature? She knows nothing of wolf magick. I want to take her.

Draw me in, Charlotte. Be brave, my lovely.”

 

One of the most thrilling events we can experience is the mysterious. Lift the veil of the unknown. Explore the labyrinth of doubts. Marc Sexton understands this voyage into darkness, to weave the physical and the spiritual boundaries for the woman in his bed. And only he knows its transformative powers.

Come with me to Draakensky where Charlotte battles forces of the dead, a sorcerer of wind magick, and tangles into a romantic quest with the magnetic and masterful Marc Sexton of Bedford, New York.

A tale so bold, you will become spellbound by its mystery.

Draakensky A Supernatural Tale of Magick and Romance

Crystal Lake Publishing Amazon.com

REVIEW: “Paula Cappa’s Draakensky is a gorgeous, gothic novel that has all the potential to become a modern classic. Dripping with dark, delicious prose and packed with sinful secrets and intricate lore, the pages crackle with magick and chemistry, as the reader is lured into a world of danger, passion, and intrigue. One of the must-have literary supernatural novels of 2024, Cappa delivers on every front.”

Stephen Black, author of The Famine Witch and The Kirkwood Scott Chronicles.

Draakensky Estate on the Mianus River, Bedford, New York

 

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

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A Ghostly Luminescence from Mary Shelley

Mathilda  by Mary Shelley (1959 published, written 1820)

Tuesday’s Mysterious Tale, a Novella   August 29, 2023

 

 

In Memory of Mary Shelley’s birth date, August 30,1797,  Somers Town, London, England

 

Honoring Mary Shelley has become a time at the end of every summer for Frankenstein fans, Mary Shelley readers, and for many Gothic and quiet horror lovers.  Featured here is Mary’s second piece of fiction, Mathilda, not published until 1959.

She actually began writing Mathilda in August of 1819. This novella has been overlooked by many readers. But I have to say, it is a beautifully written, and oh so very Gothic, work of Romantic literature. I think it is Mary Shelley’s finest.

The opening of the story brings  you deep into the mind of Mathilda …

“I am in a strange state of mind. I am alone—quite alone—in the world—the blight of misfortune has passed over me and withered me; I know that I am about to die and I feel happy—joyous.—I feel my pulse; it beats fast: I place my thin hand on my cheek; it burns: there is a slight, quick spirit within me which is now emitting its last sparks.”

There is a ghostly luminescence going on within this story.  I say this because of  the dark presence that pervades but also the enlightenment that Mathilda finds through nature, art, flowers, sky and trees, and through the poet Woodville whom she finds enchanting. What is explored here, though, is the devastation of incest.  And most fascinating is the perspective of her Mathilda’s father’s desires for his daughter. A torment for both of them.

We can read this through the lens of Mary’s life (psychobiographical?) or we can say this is fantasy, or even an unreliable narrator.  However you read this novella, this is a story of isolation, loneliness, love, passion, an excess of madness, and death by suicide. Drama? Lots of it. Don’t we love Mary’s exaggerated characters? Compelling? Absolutely. The suspense is like a wheel that spins slowly but mesmerizes so consistently you cannot take your eyes off it.

 

Mathilda’s attraction to solitude in her daily life breathes through this novella with a great deal of light and inspiration.

“What had I to love? Oh many things: there was the moonshine, and the bright stars; the breezes and the refreshing rains; there was the whole earth and the sky …”

“I was confined to Nature and books. Then I bounded across the fields; my spirit often seemed to ride upon the winds, and to mingle in joyful sympathy with the ambient air. Then if I wandered slowly I cheered myself with a sweet song or sweeter day dreams.”

And I daresay her attraction to her father captivated her. And captivates the reader.

“As I came, dressed in white, covered only by my tartan rachan, my hair streaming on my shoulders, and shooting across with greater speed that it could be supposed I could give to my boat, my father has often told me that I looked more like a spirit than a human maid.

I approached the shore, my father held the boat, I leapt lightly out, and in a moment was in his arms.

And now I began to live.”

 

 

 

Surely a dark masterpiece. I was left wondering if Matilda will find peace. And I so wished it for her.

Read the novella here at Gutenberg.org.

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15238/15238-h/15238-h.htm

 

Listen to the audio at Librivox,  read by Cori Samuel (3 hours). This audio is so evocative. Cori Samuel’s dramatic reading is in a rich and clear English accent. Practically musical.

[For more of Cori Samuel’s readings go to Librivox.org.]

 

Here are Mary Shelley’s short stories at Reading Fiction Blog, and other posts.

Click the underlined text to read:

Shelley, Mary On Ghosts, October 15, 2013 (scroll down)

Shelley, Mary The Invisible Girl, October 15, 2013

Shelley, Mary The Mortal ImmortalFebruary 26, 2013 WIHM*

Shelley, Mary Transformation, February 4, 2014 WIHM*

Shelley, Mary  The Last Man  February 8, 2016 WINHM*

Shelley, Mary  Anniversary of Her Death Tribute, February 1, 2018

Shelley, Mary,  The Dream,  August 28, 2018

 

Tribute to Percy Bysshe Shelley and  Mary Shelley,

August 2020.

A Lump of Death, February 2016

I would be remiss as an author not to mention my own short story about Mary Shelley, a ghost story, Beyond Castle Frankenstein. Originally published in anthology Journals of Horror: Found Fiction, Editor Terry M. West, Pleasant Storm Entertainment, Inc., 2014.

 

Mary Shelley is haunted. Haunted beyond cemeteries and tombstones. Love and madness rattle her every day. Scandal and drama steal her sleep. And finally it is the stab of her own impending death that drives her to conjure the dead.

(Beyond Castle Frankenstein is currently free on Amazon and Smashwords)

 

Don’t forget to view the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above tab for more free reading at Reading Fiction Blog. This is a compendium of some 300 short stories by more than 160 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and ‘quiet horror,’  fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

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© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

 

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Do You Believe in the Mysterious?

‘It’s night.

It has been night for a long time. Hours pass— yet it’s the same hour. I can’t sleep.

My mind is fractured like broken glass. Or a broken mirror, shards reflecting shards. I am incapable of thinking but only of receiving, like a fine-meshed net strung tight, mere glimmerings of thought. Teasing fragments of “memory”—or is it “invented memory”?—rise and turn and fall and sift and scatter and rearrange themselves into arabesques of patterns on the verge of becoming coherent, yet do not become coherent.’

Want to read more? This is from Joyce Carol Oates’ blog Celestial Timepiece.

https://celestialtimepiece.com/2017/04/09/the-collector-of-hearts-new-tales-of-the-grotesque/

 

This is her latest collection of short stories. Twenty-five Gothic horror tales.

 

s-l225

 

 

“We work in the dark—we do what we can—we give what we have.

Our doubt is our passion, and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art.”  

Henry James.  This quote hangs above Oates’ writing desk.

MONDAY BLOGS

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Southern Gothic: Macabre and Grotesque

A Rose for Emily   by William Faulkner (1930)

Tuesday’s Tale of Terror   January 20, 2015

Most know Flannery O’Conner to be the queen of southern Gothic literature. William Faulkner’s A Rose for Emily has all the ingredients of the traditional macabre and then some.

images

 

When Miss Emily Grierson died, our whole town went to her funeral.”

Spinster Emily Grierson lives in a decaying old house in the town of Jefferson, Mississippi during Civil War time. She used to paint china cups and taught young women to paint china cups. Then, tragedy strikes.  As she grows old and sick, the townsfolk would see her sitting at her downstairs window “like a carven torso of an idol in a niche, looking or not looking out …”

images-1

Artist George Frederic Watts

 

Faulkner writes a moody tale, forbidding, with palls of dust and shadows slathering his prose. Death is the central character in this story where the past and present coexist. Most of the story is told in flashbacks as we go forward and backward in time in Emily’s life. And it’s all done in Faulkner’s seamless and provocative narrative. I especially like how his descriptions mirror the psychological complexity of Emily. She is the relic of a once grand family.

180px-Rose_for_emily_2The title A Rose for Emily is allegorical. There is no rose in the story, only presence of the color: ‘the valance of curtain of faded rose color, upon the rose shaded lights’ in the bridal chamber. (See Faulkner note.)

Some readers find Faulkner’s novels too stream of consciousness, his syntax heavy, making his writing thorny to follow. If you’re not a fan of Faulkner or have not experienced his writing style (and I’d wager that most horror and supernatural readers are not big fans), this is a story that is easy to follow and will invite you into Faulkner’s world. His writing conjures up vivid images and emotionally delicate but grotesque elements.

 

Faulkner once advised his readers to reread his novels to get it. You won’t have to reread Emily. Once is enough for this short story. And if you do read it, I’d love to hear your reaction to this Gothic short story by an American literary giant. search

Read the text here at Eng.fju.edu.tw/EnglishLiterature

Listen to the audio (done in a Southern accent) here at YouTube.

Might I suggest you listen to the audio as you read along for heightened southern flavors.

 

 

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Virginia Woolf’s Ghostly Couple

A Haunted House by Virginia Woolf  (1944)

Tuesday’s Tale of Terror  July 16, 2013

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Virginia Woolf? A tale of terror? Really? I agree this author is not known for her supernatural horror, but this story does possess a haunting and beautiful darkness. I can hear many of you saying, Oh no, Virginia Woolf with her high modernistic style and all that stream of consciousness prose is too dense. I’m not a fan of Woolf either, but A Haunted House (very short at 700 words) will likely surprise you at how entertaining this little tale is for a 7-minute read.

Here’s the key. Do not approach reading this story for plot or action. Woolf’s narrative style requires a close reading, slow and careful, to get the impact of her stunning language, the imagery, and the ghostliness. Create a blank page in your reading mind and expect nothing.

We are in an old English house with a garden, apple trees spinning darkness, wood pigeons bubbling their coos from wells of silence. We meet a ghostly couple in the first paragraph. They are searching for a buried treasure in the house. The live occupants of the house are fully aware of the ghosts from knockings, shutting of doors, wandering footsteps and … from “the pulse of the house.”

Try not to slide over a single line as they all carry a beauty and symbol of their own.

“Death was the glass; death was between us …”  What possible buried treasure could these two ghosts desire to find for themselves now?

Woolf will keep you suspended until the very last line and, once you absorb it, I dare you not to murmur a small gasp.

Read this flash fiction here:

Click to access fpublic0011-a-haunted-house-virginia-woolf.pdf

 

Listen to the narration by David Federmen, Librivox, Ghost Story Collection on YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wg2agIx8c2M

If you liked the literary darkness of A Haunted House by Woolf, do leave me a message. This type of story is quite a diversion from the typical tales of terror on this blog. Did you find it refreshing? boring? too literary? stimulating?

 

Virginia Woolf, born  January 25, 1882 –  died March 28, 1941.

“I want to write a novel about Silence,” he said; “the things people don’t say.”  The Voyage Out.

“She seemed a compound of the autumn leaves and the winter sunshine …”  Night and Day

“The wave paused, and then drew out again, sighing like a sleeper whose breath comes and goes unconsciously.”  The Waves

 

“And somehow or other, the windows being open, and the book held so that it rested upon a background of escallonia hedges and distant blue, instead of being a book it seemed as if what I read was laid upon the landscape not printed, bound, or sewn up, but somehow the product of trees and fields and the hot summer sky, like the air which swam, on fine mornings, round the outline of things.”  The Essays, Vol 3: 1919-1924.

Virginia Woolf’s advice on life, women, writing, and the world:

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/virginia-woolf-who-was-she-quotes-books-feminism-bloomsbury-mrs-dalloway-google-doodle-life-a8176926.html

Also, click this link to visit March 28, 2017 here at Reading Fiction Blog to view Virginia Woolf’s Suicide Letter post.

Don’t forget to view the INDEX above of more free reading. This is a compendium of over 200 short stories by more than 100 famous storytellers of mystery, supernatural, ghost stories,  suspense, crime, sci-fi, and ‘quiet horror.’ Follow or sign up to join me in reading two short stories every month. Comments are welcome.

Other Reading Web Sites to Visit

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such    Bibliophilica   NewYorkerFictionOnline

 Lovecraft Ezine   Parlor of Horror

HorrorNews.net   Fangoria.com   

Slattery’s Art of Horror Magazine   Chuck Windig’s Terrible Minds

HorrorAddicts.net     Horror Novel Reviews    HorrorSociety.com     

Monster Librarian      HorrorTalk.com 

 Rob Around Books      The Story Reading Ape Blog

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