The Romance of the Forest (Oxford World's Classics)
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £5.39 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
32 new or used available from £3.61
Average customer review:Product Description
The Romance of the Forest (1791) heralded an enormous surge in the popularity of Gothic novels, in a decade that included Ann Radcliffe's later works, The Mysteries of Udolpho and The Italian. Set in Roman Catholic Europe of violent passions and extreme oppression, the novel follows the fate of its heroine Adeline, who is mysteriously placed under the protection of a family fleeing Paris for debt. They take refuge in a ruined abbey in south-eastern France, where sinister relics of the past - a skeleton, a manuscript, and a rusty dagger - are discovered in concealed rooms. Adeline finds herself at the mercy of the abbey's proprietor, a libidinous Marquis whose attentions finally force her to contemplate escape to distant regions. Rich in allusions to aesthetic theory and to travel literature, The Romance of the Forest is also concerned with current philosophical debate and examines systems of thought central to the intellectual life of late eighteenth-century Europe.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #158509 in Books
- Published on: 2009-03-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 432 pages
Customer Reviews
Exciting and involving reading
This is a thoroughly enjoyable book, full of intrigue, suspense, mystery and, as you'd expect, romance. Radcliffe's novels are masterpieces of suspense and atmosphere, but little else. The characters are interchangeable with any of her other novels, and the dialogue is fairly stock too, but this doesn't matter. The atmosphere around the old abbey in the woods, the curious circumstances and strange coincidences carry the story forward, and are very involving and exciting.
Anybody who enjoyed 'The Italian' or 'The Mysteries of Udolpho' will find more of the same fare here, and anybody who wants to read the kind of literary conventions Jane Austen was working for and against in 'Northanger Abbey' and 'Emma' will find them all in this novel.
dark gothic brilliant read..until the terrible sugar sweet ending
this book is incredible ..for about three quarters of the book, dark, emotive, bit scary..i loved it. You follow the central female character through so much..and so many dark scary places..exceptionally well portrayed. Then this hideously sugar sweet ending is stuck on the end which ruined the entire book for me - it was like she thought, well, i've got to end it happy ever after to please everyone..and just plonked it on the end, to the detriment of the rest of the novel.
You know when a book gets under your skin and you kind of live it..and then the author just completely ruins it and you can't bear to read it again knowing the outcome? this is one such book - it was condemned to the charity bag.
Read first three quarters and invent your own ending..or better still..buy a better book!




