GOTHIC

GOTHIC BOOKS

Gothic fiction is a genre of literature that combines elements of both the uncanny and romance. As a genre, it is generally believed to have been invented by the English author Horace Walpole, with his 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto. Gothic fiction is considered to be the parent genre for both Horror and Mystery, among other genres.

The effect of Gothic fiction feeds on a pleasing sort of terror, an extension of Romantic literary pleasures that were relatively new at the time of Walpole’s novel. Melodrama and parody (including self-parody) were other long-standing features of the Gothic initiated by Walpole.

Gothic literature is intimately associated with the Gothic Revival architecture of the same era. In a way similar to the gothic revivalists’ rejection of the clarity and rationalism of the neoclassical style of the Enlightened Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the sublime, and a quest for atmosphere. The ruins of gothic buildings gave rise to multiple linked emotions by representing the inevitable decay and collapse of human creations — thus the urge to add fake ruins as eye catchers in English landscape parks. English Gothic writers often associated medieval buildings with what they saw as a dark and terrifying period, characterized by harsh laws enforced by torture, and with mysterious, fantastic, and superstitious rituals. In literature such anti-Catholicism had a European dimension featuring Roman Catholic excesses such as the Inquisition (in southern European countries such as Italy and Spain).

Prominent features of Gothic fiction include terror (both psychological and physical), mystery, the supernatural, ghosts, haunted houses and Gothic architecture, castles, darkness, death, decay, doubles, madness, secrets, and hereditary curses.

The stock characters of Gothic fiction include tyrants, villains, bandits, maniacs, Byronic heroes, persecuted maidens, femmes fatales, monks, nuns, madwomen, magicians, vampires, werewolves, monsters, demons, angels, fallen angels, revenants, ghosts, perambulating skeletons, the Wandering Jew and the Devil himself.
[source: Goodreads]

LATEST GOTHIC REVIEWS

Wake the Bones
The Hacienda
Anatomy: A Love Story
Comfort Me With Apples
The Death of Jane Lawrence
The Year of the Witching
Home Before Dark
The Girl in the Locked Room: A Ghost Story
The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer
Beautiful Creatures
The Shadow of the Wind
The Hay Bale


Mar at BOOKIVERSE 's favorite books »

UPCOMING GOTHIC REVIEWS

House of Hunger
We Spread
Direwood
Nona the Ninth
The Witch in the Well
Gallows Hill
The Birdcage
The Key In The Lock
Summer Sons
Mexican Gothic
The Woman in Black
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
Rebecca
Dracula
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Jane Eyre