Sat, 4 August 2007 In this episode of Reading the Gothic we explore the Victorian Vampire in the sensational Varney the Vampire; or, The Feast of Blood.Comments[5] |
Tue, 26 June 2007 This episode of Reading the Gothic explores the vampire before the iconic Dracula.Comments[3] |
Wed, 27 September 2006 ![]() A brief introduction to Gothic Literature including a recommended reading guide. Comments[7] |
Wed, 27 September 2006 An except fromWilliam-Henry Ireland's The Abbess. The novel, Ireland's answer to Matthew Lewis's The Monk, tells a tale of love, sex, religion and torture. How fun is that?Comments[7] |
Mon, 14 August 2006 In this instalment of Reading the Gothic we are going to be looking at one of the bestselling Gothic novelists of the 19th century, Francis Lathom. Mystery surrounds this 19th century bestselling author, but why? Comments[4] |
Mon, 7 August 2006 In this instalment of Reading the Gothic we are going to be looking at the art of forging a profitable Gothic tale of terror. We examine Matthew Lewis's 1797 Gothic drama The Castle Spectre and Sarah Wilkinson's 1820 adaptation. Comments[4] |
Tue, 1 August 2006 In our new episode we discuss the strange mingling of the supernatural and the moral in The Abbot of Montserrat by William Child Green. Comments[3] |
Mon, 17 July 2006 ![]() In our fifth installment of Reading the Gothic we are going to be looking at the adaptability and popularity of the Gothic novel. From Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto to Stephen King's Cell, from James Whale's Frankenstein to Eli Roth's The Hostel, the Gothic continues to permeate fiction and film today. Why though? Its not as if the giant helmet that crushed the poor Conrad could illicit more than laughter from today's readers, and it's hard to imagine an eighteenth century reader understanding the Zombie effects of a cell phone in Stephen King's dark wasteland. So how does the Gothic continue to hold its deathlike grip on us? Simple, it adapts, finding what the modern reader finds most horrific and holds it up to the light for us to see. Comments[1] |
Mon, 10 July 2006 ![]() In our fouth episode of Reading the Gothic we look at one of the most extravagant, sensational and sexually charged Gothic novels, William Henry Ireland's The Abbess. From its conception in 1764 with Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto the Gothic genre has lurched from terror in Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho to sheer horror in Mathew Lewis's The Monk, but in 1799 the notorious Shakespeare forger Ireland turned his attention from the Bard to the Gothic writing what critics call the most voluptuous and salacious novel, The Abbess: A Romance. Comments[1] |
Mon, 3 July 2006 ![]() In our third episode we discuss the literary mushrooms that are Gothic chapbooks or bluebooks. Considered by some as literary rubbish, these short tales of terror have been resurrected to thrill and chill the modern reader. Comments[0] |

In this episode of Reading the Gothic we explore the Victorian Vampire in the sensational Varney the Vampire; or, The Feast of Blood.
This episode of Reading the Gothic explores the vampire before the iconic Dracula.
An except fromWilliam-Henry Ireland's The Abbess. The novel, Ireland's answer to Matthew Lewis's The Monk, tells a tale of love, sex, religion and torture. How fun is that?

